Lewis Hamilton’s first Ferrari win at the Circuit de Catalunya was not just a grand prix victory — it was the fulfilment of a dream that began on a sofa in Stevenage. Thirty years after watching Michael Schumacher conquer Barcelona in that iconic red car, Hamilton joined him in the history books on Sunday, claiming a record-extending 106th Formula 1 victory and becoming the first driver to win in his 40s since fellow Brit Nigel Mansell in 1994.
Lewis Hamilton Ferrari Win: Echoes of Schumacher in Barcelona
“I would have been at home on my couch watching that race, probably like many of you, with a plate on my lap — eating like a sandwich, or maybe chicken noodle soup,” a beaming Hamilton, 41, said after the race. “I was 12. And yeah, just looking at that red car and thinking, ‘I wonder what it’s like sitting in that red cockpit?'”
The parallels with Schumacher run deep. The German legend made his Ferrari breakthrough at the very same circuit in 1996 — almost exactly 30 years to the day Hamilton achieved his first win in red. Both men share the record for most world championships with seven apiece, though Hamilton has long since surpassed Schumacher’s 68 pole positions and 91 wins — 72 of which came with Ferrari — records Hamilton overtook back in 2020.
Crucially, the win was thoroughly deserved. A brilliant three-stop strategy, executed to perfection by Ferrari’s pit wall, gave Hamilton the platform. His pace in the second and third stints was ferocious — reminiscent of his all-conquering Mercedes years. Formula 1’s official site confirmed it was also Ferrari’s first victory since the Mexico City Grand Prix in 2024.
From Rock Bottom to the Top Step: Hamilton’s Ferrari Redemption
To appreciate Sunday fully, you need to remember just how dark 2025 was. Hamilton endured a nightmare debut campaign with the Scuderia — the first world champion in the current millennium, whether with Ferrari or elsewhere, not to win a single race in their opening season with the team. For context, Kimi Räikkönen and Fernando Alonso won on their Ferrari debuts in 2007 and 2010 respectively; Sebastian Vettel waited just three races in 2015; even Schumacher, in a car famously compared to a bathtub, won his seventh. Hamilton’s wait stretched to 31 starts.
“I’m useless, absolutely useless,” he said after a dreadful qualifying session at the Hungarian Grand Prix last July. His relationship with race engineer Riccardo Adami sounded strained throughout, and Charles Leclerc — his teammate — racked up seven podiums while Hamilton had none.
However, Hamilton acted decisively in the offseason. He replaced Adami with Carlo Santi, grew more vocal with Ferrari about what he needed, and — by his own account — trained harder than ever from Christmas Day onwards. He returned to the paddock a different man. The heaviness had gone. “I spent lots of time with family, friends — real people that know me, that have never doubted me,” he said. “I know to never second-guess yourself, never doubt yourself.”
The transformation has been stark. The dynamic between Hamilton and Leclerc has completely flipped in 2026, with Leclerc himself admitting he was “ashamed” of the qualifying crash that left him starting Sunday’s race from tenth. Meanwhile, reigning world champion Lando Norris — who completed F1’s first all-British podium since 1968 alongside Hamilton and George Russell — put it brilliantly: “He’s got a lot of crap online from a lot of people, so it’s nice that he can stick the middle finger up to all of them.”
What Hamilton’s Revival Means for the 2026 Season
Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur was quick to play down any title talk. Nevertheless, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff — who won 84 races and six championships alongside Hamilton — knows better than anyone what a fired-up Hamilton looks like. “I’d rather not fight with him for a title because I know what he’s capable of,” Wolff said. “If he smells blood, he goes. Knowing Lewis Hamilton — getting the championship is only a matter of his mind. Do you think it’s really a possibility this season? Yes, absolutely.”
Questions remain over Ferrari’s true pace on a weekend where tyre degradation was less of a factor than in previous rounds, and both Ferrari and Mercedes have engine upgrades due under the sport’s new regulations. But one thing is certain — the Lewis Hamilton who vowed to sleep in his Ferrari kit on Sunday night does not look remotely like a man happy to be a one-time winner in red. The story, as he put it himself, has only just begun.

























