The Marina Bay Circuit in Singapore is renowned as a spectacle of speed, light, and high-stakes drama. Yet, for the legendary Scuderia Ferrari team, this year’s race weekend descended into a theater of strategic tragedy and emotional collapse, laying bare the deep fissures within the team’s core operations. What should have been a triumphant moment for the Prancing Horse instead became a night of utter chaos, as their two brightest stars—Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc—exploded in unconcealed fury, pushing Ferrari to the precipice of a severe crisis of confidence.

The Broken Promise: From Practice Pace to Q3 Pitfall

In the buildup to the disastrous qualifying session, the atmosphere at Ferrari was thick with justified optimism. Across Free Practice sessions (FP1 and FP2), both Hamilton and Leclerc demonstrated that the SF-25 chassis possessed significant potential on the challenging, narrow street circuit of Singapore. Hamilton, drawing on his immense experience, confidently reported that the car felt “strong, stable, and easy to control” around the tight corners of Marina Bay. Leclerc was equally convincing, consistently battling at the front of the timing sheets, leading fans, journalists, and even those within the paddock to believe that this was finally the “turning point” Ferrari had long awaited—a genuine opportunity to challenge the established frontrunners.

However, all that hope was brutally shattered during the decisive Q3 session. At the most critical moment, Ferrari executed one of the most perplexing and ultimately detrimental strategic decisions of the season. The incident in Singapore wasn’t just a mistake; it was irrefutable evidence that a fundamental failure of coordination and pressure management remains a deep-rooted ailment within the Maranello structure.

Lewis Hamilton: The Public Scrutiny of an ‘Amateur-ish’ Setup

For Lewis Hamilton, Q3 in Singapore was a devastating, humiliating, and utterly unacceptable experience. In the crucial final run, he was left idling at the end of the pit lane with his engine stalled. Precious seconds bled away, and critically, his front tires were rapidly losing their optimal operating temperature. On a circuit like Singapore, where tire temperature and grid position are paramount, this delay was a tactical death sentence.

By the time Hamilton was finally released onto the track, his tires had deteriorated drastically, causing him to lose the necessary grip and fail to set a competitive lap time. The rhythm and confidence he had painstakingly built up since practice were lost in a matter of minutes.

His frustration was channeled into a bitter and highly public rebuke over the team radio. “At Mercedes, this never happens,” Hamilton exclaimed, his voice laced with indignation. “They always know the basics, but here, everything feels amateur-ish.”

This was far more than a simple driver complaint; it was a brutal, public condemnation and a direct challenge to Ferrari’s ambition of returning to its former glory. Hamilton, a seven-time World Champion with an unparalleled reputation, left Mercedes for Ferrari, pursuing a “major project” touted as the beginning of a new, winning era. Now, he felt trapped in a team that appeared lost and kept repeating elementary, self-inflicted mistakes. The public comparison to his former team was a sharp, painful blow to Ferrari’s pride, exposing an unresolved internal coordination crisis and a lack of professionalism. Under the dazzling lights of Marina Bay, Ferrari was once again in the spotlight, not for its blistering speed, but for its seemingly never-ending spiral of chaos.

Charles Leclerc: The Technical Nightmare and the Broken Steering Wheel

On the other side of the garage, Charles Leclerc was enduring a different kind of nightmare—one rooted in technical misjudgment, but equally devastating emotionally. His SF-25 became “unstable and difficult to control,” constantly losing balance with the rear of the car sliding uncontrollably through every corner. Every lap was an endless struggle against a car that refused to cooperate.

When Q3 concluded with a humiliating seventh place, Leclerc’s emotional control finally snapped. The moment he crossed the finish line, he angrily shouted over the radio: “Such a bad weekend!”. This was immediately followed by a powerful sound of personal violence—he violently hit the steering wheel, releasing all the pent-up frustration he had held since the first practice session. The onboard camera captured him looking down and shaking his head, a sign that his despair had reached its absolute peak.

For Leclerc, the driver who has symbolized the future of the Tifosi for years, starting from the fourth row on a notoriously narrow, difficult-to-pass circuit like Singapore was tantamount to a pre-declared defeat. What made the situation worse was the core problem was not the driver, but a technical decision made by his own team. After FP1, Ferrari decided to raise the ride height to prevent excessive wear on the bumpy circuit. The decision disastrously backfired: the car lost necessary balance, traction dropped dramatically, and Leclerc felt totally disconnected from his machine throughout qualifying. From that moment on, Ferrari’s performance plummeted, and Leclerc’s confidence in the team wavered dramatically.

The Painful Irony: Mercedes Shines Where Ferrari Crumbles

The crushing irony of the situation deepened when Mercedes, the team Hamilton had just departed, delivered a stunning performance under the Marina Bay lights. George Russell clinched pole position with an impressive performance, while Ferrari had to settle for a distant sixth and seventh place, falling catastrophically short of their winning expectations.

This was a particularly tough pill for Hamilton to swallow. He had left Mercedes for a new era of winning at Ferrari, but the reality in Singapore was the exact opposite. Ferrari stumbled once again on a confusing strategy, while Mercedes demonstrated the stability and clear direction that the Maranello team had long dreamed of.

“I felt strong all weekend,” a disappointed Hamilton said, “but at the most crucial moment, we lost our way. That’s unacceptable”. Leclerc, meanwhile, looked utterly devastated, with a weary face and a resigned tone: “I gave it my all, but the car just wouldn’t work. I don’t know what else to say”. The atmosphere in the Ferrari garage froze as the two world-class drivers confronted the harsh truth: they were miles behind the team Hamilton had left, staring at the telemetry screen in disbelief.

The Mounting Pressure: A Crisis of Leadership Under Vasseur

The reaction from Ferrari fans (the Tifosi) was equally heated. Social media exploded with criticism, with many accusing the team of wasting the talent of two of the world’s top drivers through repeated strategic errors and failing to learn from past failures. Sixth and seventh place may look respectable on paper, but in Singapore, it was tantamount to defeat before the race had even begun.

Team Principal Fred Vasseur, who was described as seemingly “at a loss” as he navigated this internal storm, attempted to explain that they had “lost momentum” and failed to capitalize on track evolution. However, for Hamilton and Leclerc, the main problem was not just losing track time; it was a fundamental failure of the basics: strategy, coordination, and pressure management.

The pressure within the team is now mounting to an unsustainable level. Hamilton, who arrived with the aura of a seven-time World Champion, is rapidly losing patience with the decision-making process at Maranello. He clearly feels that the SF-25’s potential is not being maximized due to recurring communication and strategic errors. Concurrently, Leclerc, who has symbolized Ferrari’s future for years, is growing increasingly frustrated with the team’s inconsistency, especially when race strategy works directly against him at crucial moments.

F1 observers now believe Ferrari is on the verge of a serious internal crisis. When two of the world’s best drivers lose faith in the team’s system, the impact is felt not only in track results but also in the harmony of the garage. Paddock sources have reported palpable tension in the post-race debriefing room: raised voices, emotional gestures, and finger-pointing have become commonplace among team members. Rivals believe Ferrari has lost its way. While Mercedes shines and Red Bull slowly regains its dominant form, Ferrari, with its two biggest stars, is sinking into strategic chaos and an increasingly fractured team atmosphere.

Conclusion: Is the Partnership Headed for Collapse?

The 2025 Singapore Grand Prix should have been the dawn of a new golden era at Ferrari, but instead, it became a public spectacle of collapse. Both Hamilton and Leclerc were united in their damning message: “Enough is enough!”. Ferrari, a legendary team with a rich history, once again displayed its crippling chronic weaknesses: chaotic management and poor strategy.

This crisis of confidence, managed by Fred Vasseur, poses the biggest question to the sport: Can this combination of two generational talents and senior management weather the “amateur-ish” storm threatening to engulf Maranello? Or is this just the beginning of the inevitable breakdown between the star drivers and a team structure that cannot deliver on its promise? The global Tifosi awaits the answer with bated breath.