Lewis Hamilton to make Ferrari F1 debut at Australian GP in Melbourne

Lewis Hamilton is primed for his first F1 grand prix appearance in the famous Ferrari race car at Albert Park.

Lewis Hamilton says he is itching to get going during the “most exciting period of my life” at Ferrari while cautioning about a transition period as he gets used to a new car.

After 12 years with Mercedes, he will race for the first time in the Ferrari red at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix this weekend, knowing expectations are high.

The seven-time world champion officially began work at the Scuderia in January after his shock move and completed 162 laps of testing in Bahrain.

Hamilton, 40, said on Thursday it was hard to assess Ferrari’s place in the pecking order so early in the season.

“Obviously three days in the car, difficult to know where we stand with everyone else. But we just try to keep our heads down and just focus on our job,” he said in Melbourne on Thursday.

“But for me, I mean, I’m just itching to get going, I guess it’s been a long time coming.”

Ferrari were pipped to the constructors’ championship by McLaren last year, the seventh time the Italian team had finished second since they last won the team title in 2008.

Kimi Raikkonen was the last Ferrari driver to lift the world championship for the famous Italian car manufacturer in 2007, and Hamilton tempered expectations about what he might achieve.

“I have an expectation for myself. I know what I can bring, I know I can deliver, I know what it’s going to take to do that, and it’s just getting your head down and working away,” he said.

“So I come with a very open mind. It is about getting into the season, this is about getting into a good rhythm.

“I’m still learning this new car that’s quite a lot different to what I’ve driven for my previous career, in the sense of Mercedes power coming into Ferrari power,” he added.

“It’s something quite new, different vibration, different feel, different way of working.

“The whole team works completely differently.”

But he said the new challenge motivated him.

“Definitely this is the most exciting period of my life, and so I’m really just enjoying it, and I’m so excited to get in the car tomorrow,” he said on Thursday.

Asked what would be a good result in Melbourne, he replied: “I think I just ultimately want to come away knowing that I’ve given absolutely everything.

“That I’ve excelled in the way that I know I can, that I felt comfortable in the car and just one foot in front of the other.”

Lewis Hamilton in action.
Lewis Hamilton driving the (44) Scuderia Ferrari SF-25 during day two of F1 testing at Bahrain International Circuit on February 27, 2025 [Peter Fox/Getty Images]

Read More

  • Related Posts

    Martin Lewis gives his reaction to the budget: From hiking employers’ National Insurance to inheritance tax on pensions, the money saving expert’s verdict on Rachel Reeves’ £40billion tax raid

    Martin Lewis has given a definitive run down on Rachel Reeves‘ Budget, as he warned that ‘someone will have to pay’ for Labour‘s new policies. In a massive package that…

    You Missed

    Trump’s chilling new warning to Iran’s Ayatollah over Houthi attacks: live updates

    Trump’s chilling new warning to Iran’s Ayatollah over Houthi attacks: live updates

    Is this REALLY the new leader of the resistance? SCOTT JENNINGS reveals the laughable reason why Democrats are more hated than they’ve been in nearly four decades!

    Is this REALLY the new leader of the resistance? SCOTT JENNINGS reveals the laughable reason why Democrats are more hated than they’ve been in nearly four decades!

    Can Trump actually void Biden pardons? Legal experts weigh in on the president’s shock move

    Can Trump actually void Biden pardons? Legal experts weigh in on the president’s shock move

    Last Battle of Britain pilot dies aged 105: John ‘Paddy’ Hemingway was shot down four times and survived a plane crash. Now tributes pour in as his death draws to a close our ‘finest hour’

    Last Battle of Britain pilot dies aged 105: John ‘Paddy’ Hemingway was shot down four times and survived a plane crash. Now tributes pour in as his death draws to a close our ‘finest hour’