12/10/2025 15:40
Valtteri Bottas hopes Lewis Hamilton will "bounce back" from his
difficult first season at Ferrari, but ultimately believes only
time will tell if the British driver can recover to race-winning
ways. The seven-time F1 drivers' champion made the switch from
Mercedes over the winter, riding to Maranello on a wave of
expectation and optimism. However, the partnership has thus failed
to live up to the anticipation, and if Hamilton does not score a
podium at the next round, the United States Grand Prix, he will
beat Didier Pironi's unfortunate record for the longest start to a
Ferrari tenure without a trip to the rostrum. The high points for
the 40-year-old this campaign have both come in sprints, with
victory in Shanghai and third place in Miami. Bottas, who was
team-mate to Hamilton at Mercedes between 2017 and 2021, has been
quick to point out how challenging moving teams can be. Speaking to
Crash.net , the 10-time grand prix winner said: "I hope he
[Hamilton] will bounce back. But time will show if he will. "He's
had some good moments [at Ferrari], a bit of bad luck as well. But
it's tricky. It's not easy changing a team after such a long time
at Mercedes, being kind of the lead man. "It's a very different
environment that he's working with now. I can't really say much
more than say time will show if things go better or not. But I
really hope so because I think he deserves still great results in
this sport." Having spent 2025 on the sidelines as reserve driver
at the eight-time F1 constructors' champions, Bottas will join
Cadillac next year as he returns to full-time racing. That will
mark the third time the Finnish driver has moved teams in his F1
career, but he does not feel his experience is a like-for-like
comparison with Hamilton's, given he has only ever joined new teams
at the start of a regulations cycle. "It depends on which team you
go to and how different is the car," said the former Williams,
Mercedes and Alfa Romeo/Stake driver. "I've had my experiences, but
normally it's been actually during a regulation change. So for me
it's hard to predict." The 36-year-old added: "I don't know inside
the team how they operate, how they work and what the struggles
are. So I can't really say much more than that, really."