Ferrari’s Hamilton faces Mercedes in Austria hoping to turn F1 win into a title shot
The Formula 1 title race is turning into the ultimate battle of youth against experience.
On one side, Lewis Hamilton, who at 41 just became F1’s oldest race winner since 1970. An eighth world title would make him the oldest champion since 1957.
On the other, Kimi Antonelli, the 19-year-old Italian who leads the standings, on course to be the youngest-ever to take the title.
“I’ve been here before.
I know what I have to do, and there’s a long way to go,” Hamilton said Thursday ahead of this weekend’s Austrian Grand Prix, set to take place as a “heat hazard” race as hot weather bakes Europe.
“We have a real battle on our hands, and it’s going to take everyone for the rest of the year to even come close to competing with (Mercedes), but I don’t think it’s impossible.”
Hamilton’s win at Barcelona two weeks ago, his first with Ferrari after a year and a half of frustration, brought together smart strategy, Mercedes’ reliability issues and innovation at Ferrari with key car parts that rivals have rushed to copy. Ferrari’s bringing an upgraded engine to Austria, too.
Antonelli’s teammate George Russell said he was surprised how fast Ferrari is developing its car under F1’s strict spending rules, but “at the end of the day, we’re still the team to beat.
So this will be another good weekend to see if Ferrari are still on that good form or if that was a one-off.”
Hamilton’s win just showed that anyone “writing him off” was wrong, said Russell, his teammate at Mercedes in 2024.
“For sure, he is a big threat. Ferrari are a huge threat.
Kimi is still very much the driver out front and is performing really incredibly and consistently,” Russell said. “Ferrari feel like they’re coming and Lewis is at forefront of that.”
How Austria


