Formula 1 Thought Lewis Hamilton was Finished. Lewis had Other Ideas.

For years, Lewis Hamilton winning races became so routine it felt less like sport and more like taxes. Unavoidable. Then came the long drought. The move to Ferrari. The questions. The endless “Has he still got it?” takes from people who apparently have the memory of a goldfish.

On Sunday in Barcelona, Hamilton answered all of them.

Not with fireworks. Not with a first-lap divebomb. Not with one of those theatrical wheel-banging masterpieces people turn into documentaries years later.

He did it the Ferrari way.

Strategy. Timing. Precision. Ruthlessness.

Hamilton captured his first Formula 1 victory as a Ferrari driver at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya and, in the process, snapped Mercedes’ unbeaten run to start the 2026 season. The seven-time world champion crossed the line a commanding 19.561 seconds ahead of George Russell, with Lando Norris completing an all-British podium that looked like somebody accidentally loaded a Formula 1 replay from 1968.

The race itself started with a problem disguised as a plan.

Hamilton lined up alongside pole sitter Russell, but Ferrari’s decision to start on soft tires left him unable to attack immediately while Mercedes rolled confidently on mediums. Russell built an early cushion. Kimi Antonelli looked quick. Ferrari looked… interesting.

Then the red cars did something unusual.

They out-thought everybody.

Ferrari pulled Hamilton in early, then doubled down with a second stop on Lap 28 and committed to an aggressive three-stop strategy while the rest of the front-runners played the traditional game of trying not to be the team blamed on social media later.

Initially it looked questionable. Hamilton dropped into traffic. Oscar Piastri had to be dispatched. Max Verstappen’s race briefly got tangled in pit lane delays.

But slowly, methodically, Ferrari turned the screws.

Meanwhile Mercedes created its own problem.

Antonelli, the championship leader and clearly carrying race-winning speed, closed rapidly on teammate Russell and the pair began tripping over each other just enough to open the door. Hamilton, armed with fresher rubber and smelling opportunity the way sharks smell blood, began taking giant bites out of the gap. He inherited the lead when both Mercedes pitted for hard tires.

Then came the moment.

Fernando Alonso’s retirement triggered a Virtual Safety Car.

Ferrari reacted instantly.

Hamilton dove in, took hard tires, and emerged still ahead.

At that point the race was effectively over.

Hamilton disappeared.

Lap after lap the gap stretched until what had started as a tactical gamble turned into a public demonstration.

By the finish, Ferrari wasn’t hanging on.

They were gone.

“First I have to start and say a huge grazia to everyone here, my team here at Ferrari, everyone back at the factory, Fred for believing in me and bringing me to this team,” Hamilton said afterward.

“I started out a dream last year which seemed almost impossible during my time last year, but we never gave up hope and the team just continued to lift me up.

“We made so many changes and we made so many improvements and on top of that I’ve got the greatest fanbase a sportsman could ever ask for.”

Then came the line that probably explains everything.

“I watched Ferrari have all that success when I was younger, watching it on TV, and as I’ve been racing here, I’d always watch the screens and wonder what it would be like to win in that car, and it’s come.

“This is just the first I hope of many. Great pit stops today, great strategy, the car felt fantastic, and forza Ferrari.”

If Hamilton delivered the celebration, Antonelli delivered the heartbreak.

The teenage championship leader looked capable of challenging for victory after finding serious pace in the second half of the race and even getting ahead of Russell briefly. Then, with only a handful of laps remaining, the Mercedes slowed.

Game over.

“I feel a bit empty to be fair right now, but it is what it is,” Antonelli said.

“For sure the pace was good today… it’s a shame because it was like three laps from the end, almost there.”

Even in disappointment, Antonelli found time to tip his cap.

“First of all, I’m very happy for Lewis because he’s been chasing that first win with Ferrari for so long and I’m really happy for him to see him succeed in that.”

Russell inherited second and sounded genuinely pleased to see his former Mercedes teammate back where everyone expects him to be.

“Huge congrats to Lewis because I know how hard he works,” Russell said.

“We spent a lot of years together at Mercedes, so I’m really pleased to see him back to the Lewis I remember when I was growing up watching Formula 1.”

Behind them, Verstappen finished fourth ahead of Piastri, while Red Bull teammate Isack Hadjar took sixth.

Alpine quietly had one of its strongest afternoons in ages with Pierre Gasly and Franco Colapinto finishing seventh and eighth, while Racing Bulls continued punching above their weight with Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad completing the top 10.

And then there was Charles Leclerc.

Because Ferrari apparently cannot allow itself complete happiness.

Leclerc had moved aside strategically to help Hamilton’s charge and looked capable of joining the celebration before a late hydraulic failure turned his Ferrari into something between a shopping cart and a very expensive paperweight.

“It’s not only power steering,” Leclerc said.

“In general I had no brakes, no power steering, no shifts.”

Still, even after dragging his wounded Ferrari back and retiring, Leclerc had no interest in stealing the spotlight.

“I don’t want to take any credit for today. I think Lewis and the team won it on their own.”

For Hamilton, though, none of the chaos mattered.

Victory No. 106.

First in red.

And after nearly two years of waiting, Formula 1’s oldest truth returned.

Never assume Lewis Hamilton is finished.

FORMULA 1 GRAN PREMIO DE BARCELONA-CATALUNYA 2026 – RACE RESULT

 

Pos. No. Driver Team Laps Time / Retired Pts.
1 44  

Lewis Hamilton

 

Ferrari

66 1:32:28.105 25
2 63  

George Russell

 

Mercedes

66 +19.561s 18
3 1  

Lando Norris

 

McLaren

66 +23.719s 15
4 3  

Max Verstappen

 

Red Bull Racing

66 +40.497s 12
5 81  

Oscar Piastri

 

McLaren

66 +58.661s 10
6 6  

Isack Hadjar

 

Red Bull Racing

65 +1 lap 8
7 10  

Pierre Gasly

 

Alpine

65 +1 lap 6
8 43  

Franco Colapinto

 

Alpine

65 +1 lap 4
9 30  

Liam Lawson

 

Racing Bulls

65 +1 lap 2
10 41  

Arvid Lindblad

 

Racing Bulls

65 +1 lap 1
11 5  

Gabriel Bortoleto

 

Audi

64 +2 laps 0
12 55  

Carlos Sainz

 

Williams

64 +2 laps 0
13 31  

Esteban Ocon

 

Haas F1 Team

64 +2 laps 0
14 11  

Sergio Perez

 

Cadillac

63 +3 laps 0
15 16  

Charles Leclerc

 

Ferrari

62 DNF 0
16 12  

Kimi Antonelli

 

Mercedes

61 DNF 0
17 87  

Oliver Bearman

 

Haas F1 Team

60 DNF 0
NC 23  

Alexander Albon

 

Williams

55 +11 laps 0
NC 14  

Fernando Alonso

 

Aston Martin

37 DNF 0
NC 27  

Nico Hulkenberg

 

Audi

29 DNF 0
NC 77  

Valtteri Bottas

 

Cadillac

15 DNF 0
NC 18  

Lance Stroll

 

Aston Martin

5 DNF 0

 

Greg Engle
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Greg is a published award winning sportswriter who spent 23 years combined active and active reserve military service, much of that in and around the Special Operations community. Greg was a writer for DriveTribe supporting Amazon's The Grand Tour and has been published in major publications across the country including the Los Angeles Times, the Cleveland Plain Dealer and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He was also a contributor to Chicken Soup for the NASCAR Soul, published in 2010, and the Christmas edition in 2016. He wrote as the NASCAR, Formula 1, Auto Reviews and National Veterans Affairs Examiner for Examiner.com and has appeared on Fox News. He holds a BS degree in communications, a Masters degree in psychology. He is currently the weekend Motorsports Editor for Autoweek and a regular contributor to Forbes.
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