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Hamilton Says He 'Moved Mountains' to Fuel Ferrari Turnaround in Montreal
26 May 2026Racingnews365News

Hamilton Says He 'Moved Mountains' to Fuel Ferrari Turnaround in Montreal

Lewis Hamilton revealed the extensive behind-the-scenes work required to secure his best Ferrari result yet, finishing second in Montreal while outpacing teammate Charles Leclerc to claim his 204th career podium.

Lewis Hamilton says he has been "moving mountains" behind the scenes to turn around his Ferrari stint, a claim backed up by his strongest weekend yet with the team in Montreal. The seven-time world champion secured second place at the Canadian Grand Prix, notching his 204th career podium and comprehensively outperforming teammate Charles Leclerc.

Why it matters:

Hamilton's 2025 campaign at Ferrari had been marked by visible struggles, prompting the team to switch race engineers mid-season. The decision to replace Riccardo Adami with Carlo Santi—Kimi Räikkönen's former engineer—underscored the urgency to reset the working dynamic and extract the performance expected from a driver of Hamilton's caliber. A podium finish in Montreal suggests those internal shifts may finally be translating into raw results when the team needs them most.

The details:

  • Hamilton described the Montreal weekend as his most enjoyable with Ferrari to date, noting the car "generally felt great" from the outset and that he had fun "every single lap."
  • The result marked his first-ever second-place finish at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, achieved during the venue's inaugural Sprint weekend.
  • Beyond the personnel changes on his side of the garage, Hamilton emphasized the depth of mental and organizational effort required to reach this point, thanking the team for "continuing to hold me up high" through a difficult adaptation to the car.
  • Outpacing Leclerc in the sister car added significance to the result, offering Hamilton a concrete benchmark after months of questions about whether he could master Ferrari's machinery relative to the Monegasque.

What's next:

One strong weekend does not erase the gap to the front, but Montreal provides Hamilton and Ferrari with a verified foundation to build upon. The challenge now is consistency—proving the Montreal pace reflects genuine progress rather than circuit-specific fortune. With the team firmly behind him and a race engineer swap now yielding improved trackside chemistry, Hamilton will look to carry this momentum into the upcoming rounds as he chases his first victory in red.

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