Hamilton refuses to join list of F1 champs who fell short at Ferrari
Team Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton walks down the paddock ahead of the Formula One Belgian Grand Prix at the Spa-Francorchamps Circuit, Spa, Belgium, July 24, 2025. (AFP Photo)


Lewis Hamilton has vowed not to become just another Formula One champion who falls short at Ferrari, declaring he’s making "a big, big push” behind the scenes to steer the Scuderia back to title glory.

Speaking ahead of the Belgian Grand Prix, the seven-time world champion and all-time race wins leader emphasized his determination to break Ferrari’s long-standing drought – a drivers’ title the team hasn’t claimed since Kimi Raikkonen in 2007.

Hamilton, who made a high-profile switch from Mercedes to Ferrari this season, has yet to reach the podium after 12 races with Formula One’s most storied team.

"I see a huge amount of potential within this team,” Hamilton told reporters Thursday. "The passion – nothing comes close to that. But it’s a huge organization with a lot of moving parts.

"And not all of them are firing on all the cylinders that they need to be. That’s ultimately why the team has not had the success that I think it deserves.

"So, I feel that it’s my job to challenge absolutely every area, to challenge everybody in the team – particularly the guys that are at the top who are making the decisions.”

Hamilton named Raikkonen – apparently forgetting that the Finn won his sole title with Ferrari – along with multiple world champions Fernando Alonso and Sebastian Vettel, as part of a list of drivers who ended up frustrated in red.

"I refuse for that to be the case with me,” said the 40-year-old Briton, who is chasing an eighth title but knows time is not on his side. "So I’m going the extra mile.

"I think if you take the same path all the time, you get the same results. So I’m just challenging certain things. They’ve been incredibly responsive. We’ve been improving in so many areas.”

Hamilton said he had been busy at the factory since his home grand prix at Silverstone, where he finished fourth, holding meetings and going over everything he felt needed to change.

He has called meetings attended by leaders from various departments, as well as team principal Fred Vasseur.

"I’ve sent documents. After the first few races, I did a full document for the team. Then during this break, I had another two documents that I sent in, and then I come in and want to address those,” he said.

"Some of it’s structural adjustments that we need to make as a team in order to get better in all the areas we want to improve.

"And the other one was really about the car – the current issues that I have, some things that you do want to take on to next year’s car, and some that you need to work on changing.”

Hamilton is sixth in the standings, 16 points behind fifth-placed teammate Charles Leclerc. He has so far beaten the Monegasque only twice in regular grands prix.

The Briton won in Belgium last year – his 105th and most recent career victory.