Racing

When Lewis Hamilton mentioned in an interview before the Bahrain Grand Prix that his SF-25 car had a “performance deficit,” the technical route differences within the Ferrari team finally came to light.

Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko mocked McLaren after the Japanese Grand Prix, referring to McLaren’s conservative strategy as the “new papaya rule.”

Yesterday, the media exposed on-board footage from the Suzuka circuit. Among them, one image left a deep impression on fans—Lewis Hamilton’s SF-25 car, like a wild horse, wildly swinging its tail in high-speed corners.

After the F1 Japanese Grand Prix, Lando Norris openly questioned the team’s conservative strategy, saying that McLaren could have ended Max Verstappen’s dominance but lacked a winner’s mentality, leading to the championship trophy being handed over.

Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko mocked McLaren after the Japanese Grand Prix, referring to McLaren’s conservative strategy as the “new papaya rule.”