F1 NEWS: Stop Scapegoating Lewis Hamilton! Ross Brawn Exposes the Real Crisis Tearing F… Read more
Stop Scapegoating Lewis Hamilton! Ross Brawn Exposes the Real Crisis Tearing Ferrari Apart
By Hugo Harvey
Maranello, Italy
Ferrari has never lacked drama, but according to former team principal and Formula 1 mastermind Ross Brawn, the current turmoil engulfing the Scuderia has been dangerously misunderstood. In a moment that has sent shockwaves through Maranello, Brawn has forcefully dismissed the growing narrative that Lewis Hamilton is at the center of Ferrari’s problems, insisting instead that the crisis runs far deeper and far higher than any driver could possibly be responsible for.
As pressure mounts following another turbulent phase in Ferrari’s modern era, Hamilton has increasingly been positioned by critics and sections of the media as a convenient explanation for underwhelming results, internal tension, and strategic inconsistency. Brawn, however, has delivered a stark warning: blaming the driver is not only wrong, it is actively preventing Ferrari from confronting the real issues eating away at the team from within.
According to Brawn, Ferrari’s struggle is not one of talent, effort, or even ambition. It is a structural and cultural crisis a chronic inability to align leadership, engineering philosophy, and long-term vision under sustained pressure. In his view, Ferrari continues to suffer from the same internal contradictions that have haunted the team since its last championship triumph.
“Ferrari doesn’t lack brilliant people,” Brawn has long maintained in various assessments of the team. “What it lacks is stability of direction and clarity of authority.” Those words now resonate louder than ever.
At the heart of Brawn’s argument is the belief that Ferrari repeatedly undermines itself by reacting emotionally to short-term setbacks. When results dip, scrutiny intensifies, fingers point, and drivers become the most visible and therefore easiest targets. Hamilton’s global profile, seven world titles, and immense influence only magnify this tendency. Yet Brawn is adamant that even a driver of Hamilton’s caliber cannot compensate for a fractured technical and operational structure.
Internally, Ferrari continues to wrestle with overlapping responsibilities, blurred chains of command, and constant political pressure from above. Decision-making is often slowed by layers of approval, while technical departments are forced to adapt to shifting priorities mid-season. The result, Brawn suggests, is a team that rarely operates with the ruthless efficiency required to dominate modern Formula 1.
Hamilton, far from being the problem, represents something else entirely: a mirror. His feedback is precise, demanding, and uncompromising. In teams built on clarity and trust, that kind of input accelerates progress. In teams plagued by uncertainty, it can expose weaknesses leadership would rather keep hidden.
Brawn’s comments also challenge the persistent myth that Ferrari’s failures can be fixed by simply changing drivers. Over the past decade, the team has cycled through world champions, race winners, and prodigious talents yet the outcome remains stubbornly familiar. Strong starts dissolve into strategic misfires, reliability concerns resurface at critical moments, and internal pressure reaches boiling point just as championships are decided.
What makes Brawn’s intervention so devastating is not just what he says, but who is saying it. This is the man who helped build Ferrari’s golden era alongside Michael Schumacher, Jean Todt, and Rory Byrne an era defined by unity, patience, and absolute trust in a clear hierarchy. Brawn knows exactly what a championship-winning Ferrari looks like, and by implication, what the current version lacks.
His message is blunt: until Ferrari confronts its internal culture the fear of failure, the obsession with image, and the reflex to assign blame downward no driver, not even Lewis Hamilton, can deliver sustained success. Scapegoating may offer temporary relief to frustrated fans and executives, but it ultimately deepens the crisis by shielding those truly responsible from accountability.
For Hamilton, the situation represents both a challenge and a test of legacy. He has built his career on transforming teams, elevating standards, and demanding excellence. But even he cannot rewrite an organization’s DNA alone. If Ferrari is to reclaim its place at the summit of Formula 1, it must first heed Brawn’s warning and stop searching for villains in the cockpit.
The real battle is not on the track. It is inside Maranello and until that battle is won, Ferrari’s troubles will continue, regardless of who wears red on Sunday.
