In the glitzy, neon-drenched streets of Las Vegas, where fortunes are made and lost on the turn of a card, Lewis Hamilton has been dealt the worst hand of his illustrious Formula 1 career.
The 2025 Las Vegas Grand Prix qualifying session will go down in history not for the spectacle of the strip or the shimmering sphere, but for the stunning, almost incomprehensible image of the seven-time world champion’s name languishing at the very bottom of the timing sheets.
For the first time in his 19-year tenure at the pinnacle of motorsport, Lewis Hamilton qualified last—20th out of 20 drivers—purely on pace.
This was not a result born of a blown engine, a broken gearbox, or a strategic gamble on slick tires in a monsoon. This was a disaster of performance and execution that has left the paddock stunned and Hamilton visibly devastated.
The “fairy tale” move to Ferrari, which was meant to be the crowning glory of the Briton’s career, has rapidly descended into a horror story, with the events in Nevada marking the undisputed nadir of a season that has offered no silver linings.

A Perfect Storm in the Desert
The session began under treacherous skies, with the desert city lashed by rain that turned the street circuit into a skating rink. Conditions were unpredictable, challenging the world’s best drivers to find grip where there was none. While wet weather has historically been the canvas on which Hamilton paints his masterpieces, this time, the rain only served to wash away any remaining hope for the weekend.
The chaos unfolded in Q1, the first segment of qualifying where the slowest five drivers are eliminated. Usually, this is a formality for a driver of Hamilton’s caliber. However, as the clock ticked down, disaster struck. With just two minutes remaining and the track evolving, Hamilton was on a critical warm-up lap. At Turn 14, he struck a bollard.
Sky Sports F1 analyst Anthony Davidson, reviewing the onboard footage, noted the peculiarity of the incident. “He seems to have just run over this cone,” Davidson observed. The fear was that the debris became lodged beneath the floor of the Ferrari, a catastrophic handicap for a modern ground-effect F1 car where underfloor aerodynamics dictate the vast majority of performance. A stuck bollard would disrupt airflow, stall the diffuser, and essentially cripple the car’s grip levels.
Yet, the issues compounded. As Hamilton prepared for his final flying lap—the “do or die” attempt to drag himself out of the elimination zone—confusion reigned. He crossed the start-finish line just as the red lights illuminated, signaling the end of the session. He had missed the cut-off. His final lap never began.
The Weight of History
To understand the magnitude of this failure, one must look at the statistics. Lewis Hamilton has 104 pole positions and 185 career wins. He is statistically the greatest qualifier the sport has ever seen. Since his debut in 2007, he has never qualified this far back without a significant car failure or penalty intervening. This was, in the brutal parlance of racing, a lack of pace.
It is a historic low for Ferrari as well. The last time a driver for the Scuderia qualified slowest on pace was Giancarlo Fisichella at the 2009 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix—16 years ago. For a team with the resources, prestige, and championship aspirations of Ferrari to find their star signing at the back of the grid is an embarrassment that will sting deeply in Maranello.
The contrast with the other side of the garage offered little comfort. Charles Leclerc, a master of one-lap pace, could only manage ninth. For the third time in the 2025 season, no Ferrari driver featured in the top eight of qualifying. The famous red cars were simply nowhere, lost in the spray and the midfield gloom while their rivals surged ahead.

The Cruel Irony of 2025
Perhaps the bitterest pill for Hamilton to swallow is the comparison with his former team. At the 2024 Las Vegas Grand Prix, Mercedes locked out the front row, with George Russell on pole and Hamilton alongside him in second. Fast forward 12 months, and the tables have turned in the most cruel fashion.
George Russell, leading the charge for Mercedes, qualified a respectable fourth, putting himself firmly in the fight for a podium. Hamilton, meanwhile, is starting in a position usually reserved for rookies in uncompetitive machinery. The reversal of fortune is stark. Hamilton left Mercedes seeking a new challenge and perhaps believing that Ferrari offered a better route to an eighth world title. Instead, he has found himself in a car that is inconsistent, temperamental, and seemingly incompatible with his driving style.
Hamilton’s post-qualifying demeanor was one of resignation and deep sadness. Speaking to the media, his voice heavy with emotion, he didn’t mince words. “It feels horrible,” he admitted. “It doesn’t feel good, but all I can do… I’ve just got to let it go and try to come back tomorrow. This year is definitely the hardest year.”
A Season Without a Podium
The Las Vegas result highlights a terrifying statistic for Hamilton fans: with 21 races completed, Lewis Hamilton has not scored a single podium finish in 2025. It is a mind-boggling drought for a driver who made winning a habit for nearly two decades. His last visit to the rostrum was at this very track a year ago, wearing the silver and black of Mercedes.
Since donning the scarlet of Ferrari, the champagne has remained on ice. Even during his most difficult years at McLaren, or the winless seasons with Mercedes toward the end, he always found a way to the podium. This year, the magic seems to have vanished. The question plaguing the paddock is: Why?
Hamilton insists the Ferrari is a “really good car,” a statement that seemingly contradicts the results. If the car is good, why is he 20th? Is it the setup? Is it the specific development direction Ferrari has taken, which might favor Leclerc’s sharper, more oversteer-biased style? Or is it, as some whispers suggest, a legend finally losing his battle against the dying of the light?
The reality is likely a complex mix of all these factors. Ferrari has undeniably fallen behind. They have watched McLaren and Lando Norris—who took pole position again here—set the standard. They have seen Red Bull and Max Verstappen maintain a competitive edge. Even Williams, with Carlos Sainz qualifying an incredible third, has embarrassed the Scuderia on this wet desert night.

The Uphill Battle
Sunday’s race offers a chance for redemption, but the mountain Hamilton must climb is Everest-sized. Starting 20th on a street circuit, even one with the long straights of Las Vegas, is a nightmare scenario. The spray will be blinding, the risk of first-lap carnage high, and the deficit to the front runners immense.
Hamilton has built a career on defying the odds. He has sliced through the field before, turning disaster into damage limitation. But those comebacks were powered by Mercedes engines and cars that were fundamentally the class of the field. This Ferrari has shown no such dominance. To get from 20th to the points will require a perfect strategy, a chaotic race, and a vintage drive from a man who currently looks bereft of confidence.
As the F1 circus prepares for the race, the spotlight burns hotter on Hamilton than ever before. This was supposed to be the year he revitalized his career. Instead, 2025 is shaping up to be the year the myth of the “Ferrari Dream” was shattered. With only two races left after Vegas, time is running out to rewrite the ending of this painful chapter. For now, the greatest driver of his generation sits alone at the back of the grid, a stark symbol of a gamble that, so far, has failed to pay out.