AR3-GP wrote: ↑11 Jan 2026, 20:27
ScuderiaLeo wrote: ↑11 Jan 2026, 19:24
Emag wrote: ↑11 Jan 2026, 14:03
My bad then, hadn’t seen it before.
The interview is indeed old but it's curious AR is reporting it now.
They rarely post about anything related to the drivers, contracts, etc unless they have verified it independently. Generally they're more focused on the team and car.
I wonder what has occurred behind the scenes to make them write about this.
Leclerc’s contract isn’t the focus of the article. It’s a footnote. It’s presented in the wider context which everyone knows by now. Ground effect era was a failure. Frederick Vasseur was given a stay of execution. If Ferrari don’t come out swinging, the team will implode. Elkann will come for the head of Vasseur. The Sir will retire. The predestined one will depart. It will set them back many years.
You can say Ferrari’s ground effect era has been a failure by Ferrari’s own standards, but that’s very different from calling it a failure in a broader sense. Ferrari were literally a handful of points away from a WCC in 2024; that’s falling short of expectations, not failure.
They started 2022 strong but then TD39 hit. The rest of 2022 went sideways following TD-39 and 2023 started off in the wrong direction with correlation and platform issues. By 2024, they’d largely stabilized things, had a genuinely competitive car, and executed well over a full season (for the most part ... the technical issues from Barcelona through Zandvoort were problematic). Then 2025 drifted again, seemingly as a result of a fundamental issue regarding suspension/mechanical platform vis-a-vis ride height. It was not a straight decline but instead a series of technical course corrections, some handled successfully and some not.
Red Bull might be the best example of how narrative noise is largely meaningless. They were very good in 2022, genuinely unbeatable in 2023, then slipped to being the third or fourth-fastest car for large parts of 2024. In 2025 they were all over the map, sometimes the fourth-fastest car, sometimes the fastest, entirely dependent on technical development, upgrades, and setup direction. During this past season, there was nonstop noise around Red Bull: rumors about Verstappen leaving, talk about Newey’s departure and how much it had weakened them, questions about Horner and the team’s internal culture, the leadership change with Mekies taking over, the ongoing political tension between the Thai and Austrian sides of ownership.
People were saying the exact same thing then that they’re now saying about Ferrari: Red Bull were imploding, it was over. And yet, despite all of that swirling, Verstappen came within a couple of points of winning the WDC late in 2025. Not because the noise went away, not because everyone suddenly got along, but because they found performance; once they unlocked the right technical direction/setup window, the results quickly followed.
McLaren fits the same mold from the opposite direction. They were nowhere in 2022 and genuinely awful at the start of 2023. Midway through that season they overhauled the car, brought significant upgrades, fixed major correlation issues, and completely transformed their performance. Within a short span they were championship contenders: WCC in 2024, and WCC/WDC in 2025. If you’d applied this same implosion logic to McLaren heading into the 2023 season, it would’ve been proven wrong within a handful of months.
None of this is to say that sustained poor performance wouldn’t eventually create real problems. But that’s very different from the claim that Ferrari must start the 2026 regulations strongly or they will inevitably implode. We have multiple examples of teams unlocking significant performance with the right technical interventions within a given season. The idea that a slow start in the first few races under these new regulations means Ferrari (or any given team) is permanently compromised for the rest of the season, just isn’t true. Modern F1 is driven by technical prowess and simulation/wind tunnel correlation; when those things line up, performance can swing quickly.