The return of the king (or at least we hope so)
There it is, friends. Sir Lewis Hamilton, the same one who made us believe in happy endings with Mercedes, now wearing Ferrari red as if he were a teenager who just bought his first bandage shirt. The boy who dreamed of driving for Prancing Horse since he could remember (and probably before he was out of diapers) is back at Silverstone, ready to… well, not to finish fourth again, please.
Of droughts, podiums and a toxic love with Great Britain
It turns out that 2025 is not the year of Hamilton. Between adapting to the SF-25 (which seems to have more personality than a Bridgerton character) and seeing how Charles Leclerc steals the spotlight, the Briton has accumulated 11 races without a top 3. Eleven. Almost as many as the seasons of Friends, but much less fun. Of course, if there is a place where magic happens (or at least a scoring miracle), it is in Silverstone. Here the man has 9 victories, 7 pole positions and a contract with destiny… or with the track, who knows.
Let’s remember 2024: 945 days without winning, an emotional farewell to Mercedes (6 titles, 8 constructors’ cups and tears on Twitter) and bam! Victory at home as if it were a Hollywood script written at 3 AM. Now, with Ferrari, history calls for an equally epic chapter. Or at least a decent podium so that the tifosi don’t start missing Carlos Sainz.
The curious thing is that, despite the numbers (105 wins in F1, absolute record), Hamilton in 2025 looks like that dedicated student who changed schools and is now fighting not to be left behind. Between fourth place in Emilia-Romagna, another fourth in Austria and that victory in the Sprint in China (which counts, but like counting the likes of a deleted TikTok), the Briton urgently needs Silverstone to give him his usual dose of main character energy.
Why does Silverstone make him unstoppable?
Simple: Hamilton here is more local than fish and chips. With a 36% effectiveness in pole positions (7 of 19 participations) and those overtakings that seem taken from Fast & Furious (British version with tea included), the track is his backyard. Even the crazy weather works in his favor, because if there’s one thing Sir Lewis knows how to do, it’s dance in the rain as if he were an influencer at Coachella.
So, dear viewers, prepare yourselves for drama. Will he be able to break the Ferrari curse? Will he surpass Leclerc or will he end up second best again? The only thing that is certain is that, if there is one place Hamilton can resurrect his 2025, it is here. And if not… we will always have the meme of “at least he tried”.
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