
Rob Smedley: Ferrari's Miami upgrades 'slightly soul-destroying' as McLaren closes gap
Former F1 engineer Rob Smedley criticizes Ferrari's Miami upgrades, saying McLaren's bigger performance gain signals correlation issues that could derail the Scuderia's season.
Ferrari's Miami Grand Prix upgrades have been branded "slightly soul-destroying" by former Formula 1 engineer Rob Smedley, as McLaren's more substantial performance boost cut the Scuderia's championship lead to just 16 points.
Why it matters:
Ferrari's early 2026 momentum—including Lewis Hamilton's first podium for the team in China—is under threat. McLaren's rapid convergence through effective upgrades exposes potential weaknesses in Ferrari's development path, raising questions about whether the Maranello outfit can sustain its title challenge.
The details:
- Speaking on the High Performance Racing podcast, Smedley explained that when upgrades don't deliver expected gains, teams enter a "negative loop" of reverse-engineering correlation issues between wind tunnel data and on-track performance.
- This diverts resources from making the car faster to fixing simulation mismatches.
- Former Alpine team principal Otmar Szafnauer added that correlation problems force aerodynamicists to abandon development work, compounding resource constraints.
- Szafnauer highlighted that teams like his former Force India had dedicated aero-performance groups for correlation, but Alpine had only three people—insufficient if issues arise.
What's next:
Ferrari must quickly diagnose whether its Miami upgrades suffered from poor correlation or other flaws. With McLaren now breathing down its neck and Red Bull also looming, any prolonged technical detour could cost valuable points. The next few races will reveal whether Ferrari's early-season promise was real or a mirage.
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