Lewis Hamilton advised about “the big thing, for me” in Ferrari adaptation
Lewis Hamilton told about key part ofꦑ adapting to Ferrari which ta🏅kes time

Lewis Hamilton has been handed advice about a specific part of his adaptation to the Ferrari which requires more laps.
The headline-grabbing performances and results have not arrived on a Sunday for 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Lewis Hamilton since🧜 he donned the red overalls 🔥at the beginning of this year.
His qualifying formꦐ has been even worse, and has caused him to bemoan 🍷his own ability to extract performance from his new machinery.
But Sk꧃y Sports’ Bernie Collins, a former F1 race strategist, has identified a crucial aspect to his adaptation from Mercedes which requir൲es him to drive more laps.
Lewis Hamilton told about 'instinct' in Ferrari
Collins analysed: “Lewis is gett𒁏ing used to this car, getting used to communication with the pit wall, getting used to how the car instinctiꦅvely drives, how it performs in certain areas.
“The big for me is that the drivers have loads of switches at their disposal: brake balance, how to brake through the corner. There are lots ꦫof switches on that steering wheelဣ.
“You need to know instinctively: ‘Okay, I’ve got a bit of tailwind, a bit of headw🍬ind, what do I need to change? What will the reactiඣon be to the car?’
“That’s just getting laps on the board. It will take time for Lewis to ge꧃t to a point of instinctively knowing how the Ferrari will perform.
“He’s not there yet.”
Martin Brundꦬle has heard from inside Ferrari that they are not concerned by Hamilton’s seemingly slow progress.
Brundle said: “Ferrari use🧸d an analogy: ‘It’s like putting on somebody else’s pair of skis or ice skates’.
“It takes some time ꦉto get used to it. That’s how they feel about it.”
Hamilton briefly shot to the pinnacle of🦋 Formula 1 when he won the sprint race at the Chinese Gran💝d Prix.
His first victory wea🔜ring red, albeit in the shorter format, did not lead to🐷 greater success. Even the rest of that weekend was downhill for Hamilton.
Brundle explained: “It was a different track, a sprint, a much shorter race with much less fuel on🌸 board.
“He got in front and stay꧅ed in front. It looked like vi🧸ntage Lewis Hamilton.
“That’s how it seemed. We were thinking ‘wow he’s back in busin🌞ess, back in the game’.
“Sadly it has not turned out that way in the l♔onger grand 🍃prix format.”

James was a sports journalist at Sky Sports for a decade covering everything from American🍸 sports, to football, to F1.