Sports
“Sometimes I forget how stupid I was at 17!”: Toto Wolff, announce of Lewis Hamilton’s replacement at Mercedes
Toto Wolff made an announcement about Lewis Hamilton’s replacement at Mercedes. The British star will leave for Ferrari next season. The second-country Formula 1 Grand Prix will be from August 23 to 25, live in AntenaPLAY.
Too Wolff said he was waiting to see the Formula 2 driver at work and hopes he will have the ability to learn from the mistakes. Kimi Antonelli is 17 years old and is expected to be one of the top drivers of the following years.
Mercedes had high hopes ahead of the Netherlands Grand Prix qualifiers and even thought they could get a pole position. The Grand Race of the Formula 1 Grand Prix is Sunday, from 15:45, live on Antena 1 and in AntenaPLAY.
Toto Wolff in shock after Lewis Hamilton was knocked out in Q2
Lewis Hamilton offered a nast surprise and finished 11th at the end of Q2. Immediately, the cameras surprised Mercedes boss Toto Wolff, hardened at the team’s box.
Toto Wolff, announce of Lewis Hamilton’s replacement at Mercedes: “Sometimes I forget how stupid I was at 17!”
Toto Wolff made an announcement about Lewis Hamilton’s replacement at Mercedes. The British star will leave for Ferrari next season. The second-country Formula 1 Grand Prix will be from August 23 to 25, live in AntenaPLAY.
Too Wolff said he was waiting to see the Formula 2 driver at work and hopes he will have the ability to learn from the mistakes. Kimi Antonelli is 17 years old and is expected to be one of the top drivers of the following years.
“Sometimes I forget how stupid I was at 17. I certainly wouldn’t have been so mature as to compete in such an environment. I want to see Kimi Antonelli make mistakes and learn from them.
It’s always very difficult to judge a driver based on Formula 2 results. We analyzed it while testing the Formula 1 machine, and the data is encouraging,” Wolff told RacingNews365.
The last two years at Mercedes have changed Lewis Hamilton
The last two years at Mercedes have changed Lewis Hamilton. The world champion’s seven-time drought has been in for the 2021 season when he lost the world title right in the final round of the season to Max Verstappen.
For the Briton, a difficult period followed and no wins for almost two-and-a-half years. He managed to end this negative 945-day series without victory a month and a half ago at Silverstone. He has also passed a win at Spa after the descapation of his teammate George Russell.
Hamilton is preparing for the last races in the Mercedes car, in 2024 and will drive for Ferrari. Until then, he talked about the things he learned during the complicated period at Mercedes over the past two years:
“Event, it’s all about how much you dedicate yourself to, to work hard. Finally comes the reward. I’ve learned that life is about how much pain you can feel, but to continue. About how much you can suffer, but move on.
It’s not about how you fall, it’s about how you get up. It’s about how you continue every day and how you connect with the people you work with. I’ve learned to be a better teammate during this time, because we’ve had more time to focus on communications,” Lewis Hamilton told Esquire magazine, as cited by motorsportweek.com.
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Ferrari warned Lewis Hamilton will cause internal drama
A former Ferrari engineer has criticised the decision to bring in Lewis Hamilton and thinks the Brit’s presence will mean “a lot of potential for drama”.
At the age of 40, seven-time Formula 1 champion Hamilton will form a formidable driver partnership with Charles Leclerc. His big switch comes at the expense of Carlos Sainz, who has performed well for the Italian squad but who was axed so they had room for their blockbuster new signing.
But not everyone of a Ferrari persuasion is convinced that it will go well. Ernest Knoors, who spent many years as an engineer at Maranello, specialising in power units, worries that Hamilton’s presence could do more harm than good for a team that is finding its groove under Frederic Vasseur.
“A big name like Hamilton also brings a lot of politics and if politics within Ferrari are not managed well, then there is a lot of potential for drama,” he told Formule1.nl. “Hamilton has the tendency that if things do not work out, he turns his whole car upside down and starts experimenting.
“Ferrari believes very much in the big personalities and will follow him. But Hamilton is just someone you have to guide a little bit and not give the freedom to rebuild the whole car, because then it will go completely wrong. So I do not know if it is such a smart move, but of course it is nice for the sport.”
News of Hamilton’s planned move broke on February 1, coinciding with football’s Transfer Deadline Day. That the back pages of many newspapers were dominated by the decision of Hamilton to swap Mercedes for Ferrari was testament to the magnitude of the announcement.
Sainz was not surprised as he had been informed by his team of the plan ahead of it being made public. But the Spaniard responded well with two victories to date this season and five further appearances on the podium, on the way to what looks likely to be a fifth-placed finish in the championship – two spots and 54 points ahead of Hamilton.
Sainz has signed for Williams next year and, after several years of running at the front of the grid, will focus on his new challenge of helping restore one of the grid’s most historic teams to its former glory. But Knoors believes he should have been kept on by Ferrari instead.
The Dutchman added: “I see Lewis Hamilton’s arrival at Ferrari more as a PR move. With all due respect, Hamilton is not going to take that Ferrari from P6 to P1. He will get the most out of it, but what Ferrari has to do is make that car faster. And if you make that car faster, you can easily drive at the front with the current line-up.
“Besides, as a team you have to look further on the horizon. If Hamilton becomes champion in the coming years, he and Ferrari will become immortal. But if you want to build a team with talent for the next five years, are you going to build on Hamilton? No, because he will really be finished after two or three years. That is why I would have kept the very strong line-up that Ferrari has now.”
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Listen to Chase Elliott, No. 9 team react to pace car crash at Phoenix in 2024
Chase Elliott had a front-row seat for one of NASCAR’s most bizarre moments of the 2024 Cup Series season. At the start of Stage 2, the pace car dove onto pit road in front of Elliott; however, it was a tad too late. The pace car made contact with the sand barrels at the entry of pit road and caused a red flag for cleanup.
Initially, there was some speculation on the NBC Sports broadcast, even from the No. 9 team, that Elliott made contact with the pace car. Fortunately, the pace car didn’t slide across the No. 9 car’s nose, but it undoubtedly provided one of NASCAR’s craziest red flag moments in recent memory.
Below, you can listen to Elliott and the No. 9 team react to the pace car crashing into the sand barrels on pit road at Phoenix during Championship Weekend!
Sports
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Exposes NASCAR’s Hidden Truth: The Pressure Turns Champions Miserable
Reflecting on the recent retirement of 2017 NASCAR Cup Series champion Martin Truex Jr., Earnhardt didn’t mince words about the toll NASCAR takes on its drivers. Speaking candidly, the two-time Daytona 500 winner admitted that the pressure to perform every week left him feeling miserable for most of his racing career—a sentiment he believes is shared by many of his peers.
“Right or wrong, racing made me a miserable person 90% of the time,” Earnhardt confessed. “And him too. I mean, ask Kyle Busch, ask anybody—unless you’re winning, you’re not happy.”
For these elite drivers, the sport is a relentless grind. A podium finish might bring temporary relief, but anything short of victory is often a source of frustration. The immense effort poured into preparation and execution rarely feels like it pays off unless the checkered flag is theirs.
Earnhardt highlighted the mental toll of falling short, explaining how the relentless focus on winning can overshadow the joy of simply competing. Even a solid performance feels hollow compared to the euphoria of a win.
“Unless you’re winning, you’re not happy at all,” he said. “You’re okay with a good run, but for the most part, all the effort it takes just to run good—it doesn’t weigh out.”
For drivers, the stakes are sky-high every week. Sponsors, fans, and teams demand nothing less than excellence, leaving little room for error or personal satisfaction in anything less than a dominant performance.
Earnhardt also shared insights into his friendship with Martin Truex Jr., who recently announced his retirement. While the two often spend time hunting together during NASCAR’s off-season, Earnhardt noted that the stress of racing even creeps into their leisure activities.
“When I’m with him during hunting season, it’s always in the back of his mind,” Earnhardt said. “It’s that stressful part of the year when he’s as miserable as he’s going to be.”
Now, with Truex stepping away from the track, Earnhardt looks forward to seeing a lighter, happier version of his long-time friend. Without the weight of weekly competition hanging over him, Truex might finally be able to relax and enjoy the outdoor lifestyle he cherishes.
“It’ll be fun to see him loosen up,” Earnhardt added.
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