When Lewis Hamilton speaks, the paddock listens. His words carry weight, and when he spoke after finishing sixth at the 2023 Italian Grand Prix, his message was clear: Ferrari’s journey to the top is not as straightforward as many had hoped. It wasn’t just a race result. It was a warning. Monza, the heart and soul of Ferrari, offered a backdrop for Hamilton’s striking honesty, and what he revealed could be more critical than it first appeared.

A Race That Could Have Been

Hamilton’s Monza weekend was one filled with contradictions. On the one hand, he fought back from a 10th-place start and a five-second penalty to finish sixth. On the other, he was painfully aware that it could have been better. The Mercedes driver acknowledged the team’s struggles with pace early on, remarking, “We obviously don’t have the pace of the cars much further ahead. So competing for the top three is off the cards for a while.” These words, though grounded in reality, were far more cutting than anything a PR-trained driver would typically let slip.

The message was clear: Ferrari’s rivals, especially Red Bull, had outpaced them for the foreseeable future. Hamilton’s candid admission about his struggles, his discomfort with the car, and how a strategy error left him further from the top positions, painted a grim picture for a team fighting to return to prominence.

The Strategy Gamble

The race unfolded with Hamilton making his way through the grid, battling with drivers like Yuki Tsunoda and Fernando Alonso. A key moment came when the team made a critical call to extend Hamilton’s first stint, hoping to gain an advantage with fresher tires later on. But the gamble didn’t pay off. Ferrari misjudged tire wear, and instead of seeing Hamilton’s fortunes improve, he ended up stuck behind Esteban Ocon and Lance Stroll. By the time the team recognized the missed opportunity to undercut George Russell, the window had closed. Hamilton found himself 1.5 seconds behind his old teammate, a gap that proved unbridgeable.

“I think I was 1.5 seconds behind George. We should have tried to undercut him, but we missed that opportunity,” Hamilton admitted. The sting of lost chances was palpable in his words, a rare glimpse into the mind of a driver who, despite decades of experience, is still frustrated by missteps out of his control.

Ferrari’s Internal Struggles

This wasn’t just a driver’s lament; it was an indictment of Ferrari’s own internal struggles. Team principal Fred Vasseur admitted that the gamble had not worked. Ferrari had hoped extending Hamilton’s first stint would give them a tire advantage, but it turned out to be a flawed strategy. Vasseur’s candid reflection—“Perhaps if I had to do it again, I would pit Lewis a bit earlier”—was a stark reminder of how close Ferrari is to getting it right, but also how far away they are from being the dominant force they once were.

This isn’t simply about tire strategy. It’s about a team trying to rediscover its rhythm. Ferrari has shown flashes of brilliance, but their strategy calls, tire gambles, and teammate dynamics are still finding their footing. Hamilton’s fight to get comfortable in the car mirrors the team’s search for consistency. The synergy isn’t there yet, and this failure to capitalize on key moments leaves the impression of a team that’s still a few steps away from being championship contenders.

A Boost From The Fans, A Deflating Reality

Despite the frustration, Hamilton’s confidence appeared to be on the rise. He spoke of the energy from Ferrari’s passionate fanbase in Monza, something that reignited his belief in the fight. “This weekend built a lot on my confidence with the car,” he admitted. But even with this emotional boost, it wasn’t enough to offset the deficiencies in the car and strategy. Ferrari’s home race, with the famous Tifosi crowd cheering him on, could have been the moment Hamilton turned the corner with his new team. Instead, it was a sobering checkpoint—a reminder that, for all their promise, Ferrari isn’t yet ready to give Hamilton the car he needs to compete with the front runners consistently.

Charles Leclerc: A Difficult Weekend

On the other side of the Ferrari garage, Charles Leclerc’s weekend was just as frustrating. Starting from an impressive fourth position after a near-perfect qualifying lap, the Monegasque driver struggled to maintain his position. Leclerc briefly passed McLaren’s Oscar Piastri in the opening laps, but it never stuck. Ferrari’s strength on the straights was negated by its lack of stability in the corners. Leclerc’s tire management struggles left him vulnerable, and he was soon under pressure from drivers like George Russell.

As fellow drivers, like Piastri, pointed out, Leclerc’s pace in the corners wasn’t enough to keep him in contention. “He was fast in a straight line, but his cornering speed wasn’t enough,” Piastri observed. Leclerc was left battling with the car’s limitations, struggling to find the balance between speed and stability on a track that demands precision.

Hamilton’s Quiet Confidence

For Hamilton, though, the most telling moment came not on track but in his post-race comments. When asked about his potential for improvement with Ferrari, he showed no signs of panic. Instead, he was calm, focused, and even optimistic. “I’m so honored to be driving for Ferrari,” Hamilton said, echoing a sentiment that rings true despite the tough weekend. But behind his composed exterior, there was a quiet fire—one that suggested Hamilton still believes in his ability to turn things around with Ferrari, even if it means waiting.

The key takeaway here was that Hamilton is not broken. He’s not defeated. The calmness in his demeanor after a race that should have been a statement of intent was perhaps the most dangerous signal for the rest of the grid. This wasn’t the end of his fight—it was a pause. Hamilton is rebuilding, and when a seven-time world champion isn’t panicking, it’s a sign that something bigger is brewing.

The Ferrari Dilemma

Vasseur believes that Ferrari is improving, noting small gains in lap times and marginal differences in downforce levels between the straights and corners. But as anyone in Formula 1 knows, those fractions of a second are everything. In a sport where hundreds of a second separate the front runners, those small margins can make or break a championship. Hamilton knows this better than anyone, and he’s watching Ferrari closely, carefully assessing whether they have the hunger, commitment, and focus needed to make the leap to the front.

Perhaps most telling was Hamilton’s comment about his performance relative to his teammate, Leclerc. “Charles and I, if we were together, we could have had a strong race,” he mused, hinting at the potential Ferrari could have if everything clicked. But Hamilton knows it’s not just about potential—it’s about consistency. And right now, Ferrari’s consistency is the missing link.

The Unanswered Question

As the Monza weekend came to a close, the biggest question loomed over the Scuderia: Can Ferrari give Hamilton what he needs before his patience runs out? Ferrari has the fans, the history, and the passion, but it’s clear they are not yet capable of providing the car and the strategy needed to challenge for consistent wins. If they don’t get it right soon, Hamilton’s patience may wear thin.

The one thing that’s certain is this: when Hamilton is not panicking, when he’s calm and focused, he is planning. And if Ferrari can’t give him the right tools to fight, don’t be surprised if Hamilton’s next move takes him elsewhere. After all, a seven-time world champion knows when a team is close to greatness—and when it’s simply pretending to be.

The Road Ahead

Ferrari’s path to redemption is not a straight line. It’s filled with bumps, missteps, and moments of brilliance. But with Hamilton in the fold, there is hope that the Scuderia can find its rhythm. However, the longer they falter, the closer Hamilton will be to considering other options. The next chapter in this saga could be the one where everything changes—or it could be the moment the dream slips away. For Ferrari, the clock is ticking. The question is: can they deliver before it’s too late?