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George Russell is concerned Formula 1 tyre performance will deteriorate when the series switches to narrower rubber next year.

However Charles Leclerc had a positive first impression of the new prototypes from F1’s official tyre supplier Pirelli.

F1 made its tyres significantly wider in 2017 in order to improve the car’s cornering performance. They grew from 245mm wide at the front and 325mm at the rear to 305mm and 405mm respectively. Those will be trimmed to 280mm and 375mm respectively next year.

Russell said a loss of performance is an inevitable consequence of the move to narrower tyres. “A number of drivers have driven the 2026 tyres, which are going to be narrower tyres to try and help reduce the drag,” he said. “That was a bit of a challenge compared to the wide tyres we have today.

“It was quite a step worse with the tyres, naturally, because they’re just much more narrow. Hopefully they will be improved over the coming months.”

Pirelli is testing its prototype rubber using ‘mule’ cars which have been adapted to simulate the lower downforce levels next year’s cars are expected to generate. Leclerc, who has also tested the new rubber, was encouraged by his run on the narrower tyres.

“Obviously whenever you’re testing smaller tyres, you expect a big difference,” he said. “But on my side, they were good. It didn’t feel like a big difference so I was positively surprised.”

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Carlos Sainz Jnr and Ryo Hirakawa conducted further tests with the narrower tyres in Bahrain today, driving mule cars supplied by Williams and Alpine respectively. Pirelli’s director of motorsport, Mario Isola, said they had completed almost 2,700 kilometres of testing so far.

“We continued with a comparison of different types of construction and compound, the latter at the hardest end of the range, to suit the characteristics of this track,” he said. “Now, our colleagues in R&D will analyse the information carefully and provide useful indications so that we can continue to improve the product for the next generation of cars.”

Pictures: 2026 F1 tyre test in Bahrain

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Red Bull’s technical director Pierre Wache admitted he was not entirely happy with their progress during the first test of the new season.

The team encountered problems with their car at the end of last season which they aimed to address with their new RB21. Wache said they haven’t seen as much progress as they hoped for.

“I am not as happy as I could be because the car did not respond how we wanted at times, but it is going in the right direction, just maybe the magnitude of the direction was not as big as we expected and it’s something we need to work on for the first race and future development,” he said.

They covered the lowest mileage of any team, putting 1,645 kilometres on the RB21 compared to Mercedes’ 2,478km with their W16.

Like their rivals, Red Bull had to contend with several unusual interruptions which caused red flags over the last three days. However they also encountered some technical problems with their car which limited their running at times.

“It was not as smooth a test as we expected and the team expected, but it is better to find some problems here than later down the line and it is why we are here, to understand the car,” said Wache.

These problems were especially surprising as the car is outwardly very similar to last year’s design. Team principal Christian Horner previously indicated the RB21 has more drastic changes beneath its bodywork.

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“The weather was not with us and not very representative of this track,” Wache added, “but we tried to explore the potential of the car and tried to understand how it responds to different set-ups, and I think we more or less achieved that.”

The team heads into the new season having won two of the last four rounds of last season. Wache believes they are still in close competition with McLaren, Ferrari and Mercedes at the front of the field.

“I think it’s very difficult to see a starting order for Melbourne across the grid right now, you see that four teams look quite quick, including us, but we didn’t look too much at other teams, we tried to focus on our programme.”

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For the second year in a row, Carlos Sainz Jnr set the quickest lap time of any driver in pre-season testing.

He’s changed teams since then, so the bragging rights for fastest overall time go to Williams. But as we all know, headline testing times don’t reveal who is fast and who isn’t. For the same reason, constructors’ champions McLaren are unlikely to be alarmed they only set the fifth-fastest time.

Three days of running in Bahrain have yielded some noteworthy data, however.

2025 pre-season lap times

The most striking feature of the teams’ lap times this year is how close they are. This appears to support the view that the field would continue to tighten up in the fourth year under largely unchanged technical regulations.

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2025 pre-season lap times compared to last year’s test and grand prix

Three teams stand out when comparing their lap times from this week to the test and grand prix at the same track last year.

Pierre Gasly, Alpine, Bahrain International Circuit, 2025 pre-season test
Gasly set quick laps in the Alpine on Friday

Williams and Alpine are the only teams whose lap times this week were quicker than they managed in the Bahrain test and race last year. That’s a good indication of real progress, some of which was visible during the course of last season.

Both these teams have indicated the opportunity offered by next year’s rules change is a particular priority for them. They appear to have begun this year with cars closely based on those they had at the end of last season. They should therefore be able to exploit their available performance more easily, which may be reflected in the times, but it remains to be seen what development potential they will have over the year ahead.

Sauber’s times also stand out for two reasons. They are the only team who lapped slower this week than they did in both the grand prix and the test last year, which is a discouraging sign. This was memorably the case for Ferrari in pre-season testing five years ago, and that team went on to endure a tough season.

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2025 pre-season mileages compared to last year’s test

Despite several bizarre interruptions – including a power cut, a smashed pane of glass and a wayward bus – the 10-team field got more testing done than last year. Together they racked up 3,896 – almost 200 more than in 2024.

However there was a significant gap between those who did the most and the least. Mercedes, the busiest team of all, covered 50% more running than rivals Red Bull. That 833-kilometre difference is the same as more than two grands prix.

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Drivers summaries

Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari, Bahrain International Circuit, 2025 pre-season test
Hamilton fell short on mileage

The timings of the various disruptions affected some drivers more than others. Esteban Ocon was the busiest driver in Bahrain, covering 260 laps, over four-and-a-half grand prix distances.

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Any driver like Ocon who was adjusting to new teams would have welcomed that kind of mileage. Lewis Hamilton, however, did almost 100 fewer laps in his Ferrari, after his final day in the car came to an early end due to an apparent technical problem.

The only drivers who covered fewer laps than he did were the Red Bull pair and Lance Stroll. The latter had to sit out most of the final day as he was unwell.

PositionNo.DriverTeamModelEngineBest timeDeficitBest time dayTotal laps
155Carlos Sainz JnrWilliamsFW47Ferrari1’29.348Thursday195
244Lewis HamiltonFerrariSF-25Ferrari1’29.3790.031Thursday162
316Charles LeclercFerrariSF-25Ferrari1’29.4310.083Thursday220
463George RussellMercedesW16Mercedes1’29.5450.197Friday232
51Max VerstappenRed BullRB21Red Bull1’29.5660.218Friday155
623Alexander AlbonWilliamsFW47Mercedes1’29.6500.302Friday200
712Andrea Kimi AntonelliMercedesW16Mercedes1’29.7840.436Thursday226
881Oscar PiastriMcLarenMCL39Mercedes1’29.9400.592Friday195
910Pierre GaslyAlpineA525Renault1’30.0400.692Friday196
1018Lance StrollAston MartinAMR25Mercedes1’30.2290.881Thursday133
1130Liam LawsonRed BullRB21Red Bull1’30.2520.904Thursday149
127Jack DoohanAlpineA525Renault1’30.3681.020Thursday209
134Lando NorrisMcLarenMCL39Mercedes1’30.4301.082Wednesday186
1422Yuki TsunodaRacing Bulls02Red Bull1’30.4971.149Friday211
156Isack HadjarRacing Bulls02Red Bull1’30.6751.327Thursday243
1614Fernando AlonsoAston MartinAMR25Mercedes1’30.7001.352Thursday173
1731Esteban OconHaasVF-25Ferrari1’30.7281.380Friday260
185Gabriel BortoletoSauberC45Ferrari1’31.0571.709Thursday174
1927Nico HulkenbergSauberC45Ferrari1’31.4572.109Thursday180
2087Oliver BearmanHaasVF-25Ferrari1’32.3613.013Friday197

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George Russell set the fastest time on the final day of Formula 1 testing before the start of the 2025 season.

However his best effort was two-tenths of a second slower than the quickest time of the test, set by Carlos Sainz Jnr yesterday.

Sainz’s team mate Alexander Albon was briefly fastest today after producing a 1’29.650 with a run on the C4 tyres. However Max Verstappen moved to the top with a quicker time on the C3 tyres, then Russell took that from him using the same tyres, with just six minutes remaining.

Oscar Piastri produced McLaren’s fastest time of the test to end the day fourth-fastest, with what looked like a conservative effort. That lap moved him ahead of Pierre Gasly, who ran a sequence of increasingly fast laps after the lunch break, and ended up fifth.

The day’s two sessions were each interrupted due to unusual incidents. The first occured almost three-quarters of an hour before the lunch break, when a pane of glass fell onto the pit straight from a flag gantry above.

Once the mess was cleaned up, the red flags were withdrawn, and Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Fernando Alonso rejoined the track. The red flags were hastily thrown again, however, when race control realised one marshal hadn’t returned to their safe position.

The second interruption was potentially even more serious. Shortly after the lunch break ended, with the track live once more, a bus entered the circuit at the run-off area on the outside of turns nine and ten.

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Three cars were on-track at the time and fortunately neither Pierre Gasly, Esteban Ocon nor Yuki Tsunoda ran wide at that corner. The FIA said it will look into the matter.

While most teams divided their running between two drivers, Albon and Verstappen did the day’s running single-handedly. The Williams driver covered the most laps of all, while Esteban Ocon impressively covered more than 100 in just the evening session, and even found time for a harmless spin at turn one.

Lance Stroll was due to begin the day for Aston Martin, but was unwell overnight, so Fernando Alonso took over his stint. Although Stroll did drive the car after lunch, he was still not feeling right, and handed it back to Alonso after 34 laps.

Lewis Hamilton covered just 47 laps in his last chance to test before the season begins. Ferrari stopped running more than half an hour before the chequered flag fell, indicating he may have encountered some kind of problem. He had been due to complete a race distance, which is 57 laps, and a qualifying simulation.

2025 Bahrain test day three lap times

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Isack Hadjar, Racing Bulls, Bahrain International Circuit, 2025 pre-season test


Pictures from the third day of testing for the 2025 F1 season at the Bahrain International Circuit.

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Lewis Hamilton said he feels more confident at the wheel of a Formula 1 car than he has for several years following his move to Ferrari.

The seven-times champion was often dissatisfied with his car’s balance during the past three seasons, and endured the longest win-less spell of his career. That ended in 2024, when he won twice, though Hamilton nonetheless often indicated he wasn’t comfortable in his Mercedes.

Hamilton said the current generation of ‘ground effect’ cars, introduced in 2022, are harder to get a read on from the outset than their predecessors. However he is encouraged by what he’s felt so far in the new SF-25.

“I think probably in the last four years or so I’ve learned that you really can’t judge too much from the first outlook,” he said today. “I definitely think in past years before that, particularly in the previous generation of car, it was much easier to know where you stood quite early on with that early feeling.

“I would say this is the most positive feeling that I’ve had in a long time. That’s all I can really say for now.”

However he also believes there is much untapped potential at his new team. “There’s still quite a bit to come,” he said.

“But fortunately I got to drive the 2023 car, so I’ve really been able to compare the ’24 and the ’23 car and see where they’ve progressed, the problems they had on those two cars and how they’ve improved into this one.”

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Recent world champions who joined Ferrari made successful starts at the team. Fernando Alonso won on his debut in 2010 and Sebastian Vettel won his second race after joining them in 2015.

However Hamilton, who has only had one-and-a-half official testing days in his new car, pointed out his predecessors benefited from being able to start work with Ferrari earlier than he did.

“Obviously, I didn’t get to do the test at the end of the year, so for me I started relatively late compared to others that have come before me. Sebastian was here, I think [he] started in November so he had a good two months, where for me it’s been this month period that I’ve had, so a lot has been crammed into that time.

“Personally I’d like to just jump in the deep end and figure it out, and that’s what we were doing. But of course we’re going through the processes. I feel like in this period of time we’ve built a really good foundation.”

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Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff has backed the FIA’s stance against drivers swearing in official press conferences.

The FIA introduced a new set of guidelines imposing escalating fines upon drivers for swearing. The governing body’s president, Mohammed Ben Sulayem, is refusing to soften his stance in the face of opposition from Formula 1 and World Rally Championship drivers.

Wolff, who was given a formal warning for swearing in an FIA press conference in 2023, said drivers should use clean language when speaking to the media because they are representing the championship.

“We are ‘gentlemen’s sport’, we are high-tech, we represent that,” he said. “It’s different to more mainstream sports, I see us.

“Rugby for me is sophisticated and nobody would ever say a word to an official. So I don’t think we should be swearing about officials, that’s for sure.

“That’s why also the FIA needs to protect that, it’s clear. For me it is about respect for your competitors, respect to the officials, not insulting anybody, whether it’s your own people or whether it’s a competitor out there on track.”

However he does not believe drivers should be penalised for swearing on their radios while they are competing.

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“We don’t want to mute the drivers and their emotions. If we’re in a press conference, if we are being interviewed, there’s a completely different set.

“But in the car, as long as it’s not an insult and as long as it’s not disrespectful to somebody else, I would just let it go. But that’s my personal opinion.”

Williams team principal James Vowles expressed a similar view to Wolff during yesterday’s FIA press conference. “If a driver is in the car putting their life on the line, all of you in this room [and me] as well, would use words you’re not proud of in the heat of the moment. I think we have to accept that is the sport that we’re in.

“It’s probably a different environment when we’re here in this quiet room, because we are a representation of our sport, and we should be proud of what we are saying to the world. So I think we have to take a lens on what’s happening at different points.”

Mercedes driver George Russell predicted the furore over swearing will die down once the new season begins. “Always in the off-season you have a lot of non-racing-related stories because that’s the only thing that’s going on,” he said.

“I’m sure once we get through this week, we arrive in Melbourne, we’re all going to be focussed on the race and then ultimately for us that’s what we want to do. And for the fans, that’s all they want to see. So I don’t think the things that have been going on will overshadow anything.”

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Charles Leclerc finished his allocation of pre-season test days by setting the fastest time in the first part of the final day of testing.

However the Ferrari driver’s best time of 1’30.811 was almost one-and-a-half seconds off the team’s best time in testing so far. Warmer but still blustery conditions greeted the drivers for the third day of testing at the Bahrain International Circuit.

Not for the first time in Bahrain this year, the test was disrupted for an unusual reason. The session was red-flagged with just over three-quarters of an hour remaining after a glass panel fell from a gantry near the start/finish line onto the pit straight.

The panel shattered, and the session was interrupted for around 10 minutes while the mess was cleared. Once the session resumed, Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Fernando Alonso quickly headed out again – only for the session to be immediately red-flagged again due to a course vehicle on the circuit.

Once that was remedied, the session resumed once more. The entire hiatus had nonetheless been considerably less disruptive than the power cut which hit the first day of testing.

With eight teams planning to swap the occupants of their cars during the lunch break, Leclerc was one of eight drivers who completed their pre-season running. Antonelli, who set the second-fastest time, was another, and kept himself busy on track passing Leclerc and Alexander Albon.

Norris also completed his test, setting the third-fastest time. Verstappen was fourth-quickest, but will continue running in the afternoon.

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2025 Bahrain test day three midday times

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Lewis Hamilton spoke at length yesterday about his start to life at Ferrari and his feelings about the new SF-25 chassis he will race this year. Here’s everything he had to say.

Q: How has it been out there over the last couple of days and what are your emotions right now?

Hamilton: It’s been a really good couple of days. Obviously the weather got in the way in a little bit of today’s running. So I didn’t get the full, there was an extra 30 laps or so I was supposed to try and get today. But nonetheless we got through a lot of the programme and we’re basically just focusing on exploring and, for me, just getting integrated with the team as much as possible. It might seem like it’s been long, but it’s not. It’s only been a month with the team, so we’ve crammed in a lot in this short space of time. But we’ve really come a long way together and the car was feeling good on-track.

Q: Do you feel the excitement at Ferrari and how how do you manage that?

Hamilton: I definitely do. I felt it at the beginning of last year and then particularly this year from day one. It’s been amazing to see the response from not only the team and the warm welcome that I’ve had within the team, but the positivity from people outside of the team and within the sport, but also outside, just everyone excited. It’s been a really great start to the year for me. So many positive things that have happened and positive things that are up ahead as well. So it just feels right, it feels great.

Q: You’ve had the emotional phase, now it’s the work phase. What stage are you in learning this car? When do you think you will have it under control as you want?

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Hamilton: Well, I don’t have a crystal ball, so all I can say is that we’re just taking it one day at a time at a time. We’re really just focussed on doing our job. We’re not watching everything else that’s happening. We’re literally just trying to make sure that we’re learning our processes in the car. With every lap and every session that I get I’m learning more about the car, getting more and more comfortable with all the completely different control systems that we have. I’m still in the learning phase of understanding the rear suspension, the front suspension, all the different settings that they have for those and the terminology that they use for them as well. My engineer and I are also learning how we both like to work in terms of communication. So after every session, every time I go out basically, we come back in, we’re making adjustments to the information I give him and vice-versa. But I think it’s on-plan. We couldn’t be further ahead with the short space of time that we’ve had. And I’ve been really looking into like the previous great drivers that came along, such as Sebastian and Fernando, who started much earlier than me, in November for example, so we’ve done a lot in that small period of time we’ve had. But I think it’s been really great and really well reciprocated on both sides.

Q: In these tests we often see you with your hand around your eyes or in front of your head. Is there a reason to this? Do you feel there is too much attention?

Hamilton: No, I think in general people that are in the spotlight are… you’re constantly being pictured. For me, I generally like to stay private as much as I can. Of course, I’m in this environment where it’s not necessarily the easiest, but I don’t always want a camera in my face. So if I don’t want to be pictured, then I don’t want to be pictured. The only way to do it is to cover my face, you’re not going to use a picture of me like this. They just take pictures and pictures and pictures and pictures and it’s all online. So it’s just about privacy. It’s about keeping some of something to myself. And I’m holding in, keeping a part of me, that’s the way I say happy.

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Q: You’ve talked about trying to condense the acclimatisation period as best you can here, yet you looked very confident in the car today. Can you say that the car as a concept is a better one for you than your previous car?

Hamilton: I think it’s very early, a bit early to say, but I am really enjoying the car. We’re slowly bonding, I think. Yesterday was a so-so day, it was just okay. But yesterday we got through all our run plan, we’re testing a bunch of things so I’m not doing set up changes or directing where we want the car to go, we’re just getting through the motions. As well today was a bit more of getting to explore a bit of my interaction with my engineer. But so far I really enjoy driving this car.

Q: Are you having to learn the terms for everything is like anti-roll bars?

Hamilton: It’s different. It’s just the effect is slightly different, the names they have will be different. But ‘roll’ is still ‘roll’. ‘Anti-roll bar’ is still ‘anti-roll bar’. But some of the other parts of the geometry, there’s just different words for it. So I’ve got it all on my computer and I’m studying it each day and night to make sure I understand when they’re talking about these different components, because I’ve done 12 years in another place, we talked about the same thing all the time, so I was used to it. I knew exactly what they are meaning. But every time they mention it in the debrief, I’m like: ‘What part is that? Okay, this part.’ So it’s part of the learning process and that’s what makes it exciting. It’s all new and that part, I’m loving that newness

Q: Is ‘hammer time’ is still going to be ‘hammer time’?

Hamilton: I haven’t spoken to my engineer about that. I don’t know how it would sound with an Italian accent. So I have to find an Italian word, probably. We’ll probably find something new.

Q: It’s a new environment for you, there are plenty of unknown faces, but you’ve got Angela Cullen back at your side. How important is it to have some familiar faces around? And don’t you wish you could have more people that you know around during this transition period?

Hamilton: It’s always important to have a good foundation of people around you. I’ve generally had a very good base for many, many years. So I still have all the elements, all the team that I had last year. But I’ve bought Ange on top of that and we have a great relationship me and Ange. We’ve known each other for a long, long time, we’ve gone through a lot together, and she took a couple of years out and she spent time with her family, discovering the world. Asking her to come and start this new chapter with me and her accepting was really exciting. We’ve been having a blast this past month together, it’s been really awesome.

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Q: The announcement was last year that you’re going to be a Ferrari driver, but this is the year when we could actually see you in red. How do you like that colour and how is life in general in Ferrari?

Hamilton: Well, I think red suits me so it’s good. We tested it out last year in a couple of outfits you could see. But honestly, it’s an honour to be a part of this historic team. Red is the colour of passion, right? It’s of love. So there’s a huge amount of passion in this team as you know, also with the fan base that they have with the tifosi and you see that with everyone at Ferrari because obviously at Ferrari, you’ve got the car manufacturer as well, but we’re all under pretty much the same roof. So when I cross the road and go to the wind tunnel, for example, I see other members of the team, but they’re not necessarily on the race team, but they’re still a part of the team. So it’s really, really special to see that and experience that each day, and each day obviously I’m meeting new people all the time. But they’ve gone out of their way to make me feel welcome, which has honestly been the best month. I’ve had the best time. It’s been tiring, we’ve definitely all been pushing, but this is the time of focus. Everyone has their their heads down, solely focussed on doing the best we can each day. As am I, just trying to make sure we bring our best each day.
Louis, you just.

Q: You said it’s been the best month but when you look at the fact that at this stage in your career, taking on a new challenge, how surprised maybe are you? Have you been positively surprised to be so energised at this point? And what do you think it will do for you?

Hamilton: How you start, often, is very important. I think this past month couldn’t have gone any different and it couldn’t have gone any better. Things along the way, they had to happen. Barcelona have to happen. The days that we’ve had, just every day has been significant and really about just building foundations. And whilst I mentioned we have to cram a lot in a small space of time, we haven’t rushed it. We still have taken the time, we’ve just been working flat-out in the days. Long, long, long days. But that’s what we’re here for, right? But I really do think it will pay dividends moving forwards. The work that has gone on, the focus, the communication, the changes that we’ve made. But there will be more also over the six-to-eight months. This is going to be continuously evolving. But I feel like we are. It’s felt seamless, it’s felt easy in a sense of gelling with the team. It’s not felt that I had to force it. It’s done it in its own time and I feel at home.

Q: What are your thoughts about this new Monaco pit stop rules? Do you like it? What do you think about it?

Hamilton: The two-stop? I’ve had that idea for… I’m pretty sure that was my idea anyways. But if you go back and look at some of the transcripts of previous years, I’ve been mentioning the two-stop for years. I think at Monaco it has to be at least a two-stop. I think the one-stop was never really great. I think that grand prix is a great grand prix, but the race has more to offer in the race, I think, hopefully maybe with more than one pit stop. I that that won’t fix it all. We’ll still have some of the issues of not overtaking and stuff, but I think it will make it more exciting. So I’m all for it.

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Q: Could you touch on your relationship with Charles Leclerc so far. How that’s developing? He mentioned that there seem to be some similarities with your driving styles and how that might help development going forward, but how is that going on your side?

Hamilton: Charles is massively talented and getting to see him work opposite the table and watching him in the garage, it’s been really, really great. Obviously he’s been here for a long time so he knows the team well. He speaks Italian. He’s at home and at ease. But because we already had a friendship before, I think that’s made it a lot easier to just get straight in the room and work together. And he’s incredibly talented so he’s going to be so fast this year. I’m looking forward to learning what I can from him and supporting him alongside the team to deliver the best results we can get.

Q: Looking ahead to Melbourne, it’s clear that it’s going to be incredibly tight between Ferrari, between McLaren, Mercedes and probably Red Bull as well. Hundredths of a second are going to count. How is your car? Do you have a feeling for it on the limit? Is it comfortable on the limit? Can you play with it a bit?

Hamilton: That’s what these days are about, right? It’s about exploring. At the moment I think there’s still room to explore more and I’m just bit by bit eking out a little bit more each time. All the settings are so different, even just brake bias and all those sorts of things, it’s much different to what I had in the previous place. So not necessarily unlearning what I did before, but kind of re-learning this new way of working and where the car likes to be driven. It likes to be driven differently and that’s a really fun journey learning that. But at the moment I definitely feel the car underneath me, I feel like the car is responding to my inputs. Today was a positive day in making those incremental steps with the set-up. There’s still more work to do, but as I said timings and all that stuff is kind of not massively relevant here. You’ve just got to focus on your program and we’ll find out in two weeks exactly where we stand. We’ll probably have a bit of a base feeling after tomorrow of randomly where we are, but like you said, it’s going to be very, very close. I think everyone’s done a great job over winter, even the Williams looking strong as well, which is great.
So.

Q: Earlier today I saw you in the box with John Elkann (Ferrari CEO) having a conversation about a book, I believe that Mr Elkann gave it to you, and you’re having a conversation about it and both smiled. It seems like a nice conversation. Can you tell me what was the title of the book? What’s the conversation about this?

Hamilton: He hasn’t given me the book, he just showed me a book that he is reading and that he recommended to me. John and I have a really great relationship. We talk about a lot of different things, more so outside of racing, more normal life stuff. I’m trying to learn from John, he heads a huge organisation, I want to learn from him and how he goes about his daily life, his daily roles within his family, how he manages those things. So I look to him to learn, so that was basically it. But it’s great that he’s here, it’s really awesome that he’s here because he doesn’t get a lot of time off to have days like this. So to be able to come here and be a part of the team on these days is great for everybody in the team.

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Q: Were you surprised about the amount of attention you’ve received at Ferrari?

Hamilton: Not really. If you think about my brand and the brand of Ferrari, you know it’s going to make some sort [on impact]. But of course, I didn’t know how much talk there would be and it’s been overwhelming how positive it’s been and how it’s been received. But again, everything we’ve done from the shoots, the marketing team that do an amazing job here where they turn around these great videos, it’s just been looking great. I don’t know if you saw the photo shoot that just came out today, I did the creative for that, which I’m really excited about. It’s been a pleasant surprise.

Q: You are quite the unique person, you have done and won everything. We see you so passionate. Could we say that you are still only focussed on winning?

Hamilton: Right now, that’s my sole focus. Of course I have other things like I have Mission 44, I have a team of work that we’re doing, impact work. So I have space in my life for those different bits, but like 99-8%, whatever you want to say is all about this. This is what I love. This is what I grew up dreaming of and I don’t know why I have the hunger that I have or the fight, or the desire to keep doing what I’m doing to the level that I’m doing it. But I’m grateful I have it and I’m really grateful for this sport. This sport has changed my life. I don’t know where I’d be without racing, but I’ve discovered I’ve grown so much through these years in this environment and I know I’ll do a lot more in this new chapter in my life, which I’m really excited about. So I can’t wait for the first race. I can’t wait to get racing. But I’m still going to enjoy the next days because I want to make each day count, always. And I think right now it’s just about being present, really open-minded. I’m trying to learn from all the engineers here who are experts and have their own experiences and see how I can gel mine to work towards the goal that we all share.

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There’s a brief yellow flag as a marshal jumps over the barrier to retrieve the piece of debris shed by the VF-25.

A problem now for Bearman as well as part of the bodywork has come off the left-hand side of the Haas. The engine cover has torn off.

Leclerc sets the fastest time of today with a 1’30.861 but the SF-25 grabbed his attention at the final corner where he got a little loose on the exit kerb.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli quickly down to business in the Mercedes, producing a 1’31.189, which puts him a tenth of a second ahead of Leclerc.

Aston Martin say they will “confirm our line-up for this afternoon in due course” so it’s possible Alonso could do the whole day.

Not a smooth start to the day for Aston Martin whose mechanics are now having to push Alonso’s car back to the garage after he experienced a problem on the way out of the pits.

One change to that driver line-up has been announced. Aston Martin say Lance Stroll “wasn’t feeling 100%” overnight, so Alonso will start the day in the car.

The remaining eight teams will split the running between their two drivers as they have done for the rest of the week. We’re expecting to see Lando Norris, Charles Leclerc, Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Lance Stroll, Jack Doohan, Oliver Bearman, Isack Hadjar, Alexander Albon and Gabriel Bortoleto in action this morning.

World champion Max Verstappen is one of two drivers who will have his team’s car to himself for this final day. The other is Alexander Albon in the Williams.

This is the final official day of running for the teams before they gather in Melbourne for the first practice session of the season, two weeks from today.

Welcome to day three of testing for the 2025 F1 season on RaceFans Live. The test will begin at 10am local time (7am UK time).

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