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Lewis Hamilton Urges Ferrari to Investigate Rival Front Wing Tricks
6 May 2026Racingnews365AnalysisInterview

Lewis Hamilton Urges Ferrari to Investigate Rival Front Wing Tricks

Hamilton spots front wing differences among top teams and wants Ferrari to check if they are missing a key performance trick.

Lewis Hamilton is pushing Ferrari to look into what rival teams are doing with their front wings, after noticing clear design differences that he believes may be costing the Scuderia performance.

Speaking after the Miami Grand Prix, where Ferrari introduced a major upgrade package, Hamilton pointed out that while the parts delivered a step forward, rivals like McLaren, Red Bull, and even his former team Mercedes seem to have found something extra with their front wings.

Why it matters:

Front wing design is one of the most influential areas for generating downforce and managing tire wake. If Ferrari is missing a trick that the other top teams are exploiting, it could be a significant performance gap that needs urgent attention — especially with the development race heating up.

The details:

  • Hamilton said Ferrari's Miami upgrades worked, but so did rivals' — and possibly more than expected. "I heard McLaren brought a step, but that it was worth much more than they anticipated. That's not how we've experienced ours."
  • He specifically called out a front wing design pattern: "Mercedes, McLaren and Red Bull are doing something different with the front wing to us. So we need to look into that."
  • When pressed, the seven-time champion simply said: "Just look at everyone else's wing and look at ours, you'll see it looks different."
  • Ferrari brought 11 upgrades to Miami, but Hamilton suggests the team is not reaping the same relative gains as its rivals.

What's next:

Ferrari will now likely launch an internal review of their front wing concept to see if they can adapt or develop a similar approach. With the Canadian Grand Prix just weeks away, any changes would need to be fast-tracked if they are to close the gap to the front-runners.

If Hamilton's observations are correct — and his track record for reading performance is strong — Ferrari could be facing a structural disadvantage that requires more than just a quick fix.

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