Friday, 16 January 2026

FRED VASSEUR MAKES 'DESTROYED' LEWIS HAMILTON CLAIM IN FERRARI DEFENCE

Fred Vasseur says he would be "destroyed" if Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc gave positive feedback to Ferrari given its current form.


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Fred Vasseur has explained how he would be "destroyed" if Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc told him Ferrari was doing a "good job" after its troubled season in 2025.

Hopes were high at Maranello in 2025 that, following finishing just 14 points behind McLaren in '24, it could mount a bid for a first title since 2008, especially after signing Lewis Hamilton from Mercedes.

However, Ferrari ultimately went winless for the first time since 2021 as it fell to fourth in the constructors', 435 points behind McLaren, as Hamilton endured a horrid first season, and went without a podium for the first time in his career, although he did win the China Sprint and finish third in the Miami one.

Reflecting on the season, Vasseur gave a strong defence of the work Ferrari is doing, and explained how he would be "destroyed" by positive feedback from his drivers.

"I would be destroyed if I had the drivers telling me that we are doing a good job," Vasseur told media, including RacingNews365, after the 2025 season.

"Their DNA, and my DNA, is to try and to push the team to do a better job, and between them, they have to come to us, Charles and Lewis, not Lewis or Charles, both of them, they have to come to us and push the team to the limit everywhere, in every single area.

"For sure we can improve everywhere, but [in 2024], we were fighting until the last corner and the reaction was exactly the same with Charles: 'we need to improve on every single area, ono the simulator, on the set-up.' 

"This is their DNA and I'm not shocked at all when they are coming to me and saying: 'Fred, we have to improve on this, this, this and this,' because that is what we're asking them to do. 

"I saw sometimes with some articles that we have reports from drivers asking for modifications, but honestly, this is a bit naive because we have reports from the drivers every single race, and there is nothing when the driver sends a report to the team saying: 'Ok, we have to do this.'"

- Ian Parkes

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