Lewis Hamilton fires ‘don’t mess it up’ warning to Mercedes after ‘best’ day with W15
Lewis Hamilton has warned Mercedes to resist making “too many changes and mess up” his Japanese Grand Prix weekend after his “best session” with the W15 car at Suzuka.
Having announced in February that he will join Ferrari in 2025, Hamilton has endured his worst-ever start to a season in his final year as a Mercedes driver, finishing no higher than seventh in the opening three races.
Hamilton’s stuttering start to the season slumped to a new low at the last race in Australia, where he retired with an engine failure after just 15 laps.
That came after the seven-time World Champion was knocked out of Q2 in qualifying, with Hamilton admitting during the Melbourne weekend that he was “the least confident” he’d ever been with the Mercedes car.
Hamilton enjoyed a much-improved showing on Friday at Suzuka, where he was classified fifth – within half a second of Max Verstappen’s pace-setting Red Bull – in FP1 before improving to second in the rain-affected afternoon session.
Speaking after the second practice session, Hamilton revealed the W15 is in a “sweeter spot” in Japan – and urged Mercedes to avoid making excessive setup changes, claiming it could “mess up” his weekend.
He said: “It was a great session, it was a really good session for us.
“It was the best session that we’ve had this year, it’s the best the car has felt this year so far. So far, pretty positive.
“I think we’ve got a better platform or baseline to start from, so as long as we don’t make too many changes and mess it up…
“I think probably just stay where we are and hopefully we’ll get a [good weekend].”
A rule change for the F1 2024 season has been blamed for a severe lack of running in FP2, with teams no longer given extra sets of tyres in the event of a session being declared wet.
Hamilton has questioned the wisdom behind the rule tweak, adding: “It’s a shame we didn’t get that [FP2] session.
“They have changed the tyre rule, so therefore no one goes out and drives runs on the intermediate.
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