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2025 F1 World Championship is already set to make history: here's why
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Today at 08:59 AM
The countdown is about to end. In Formula 1, starting last week, some teams have already began unveiling their respective technical projects for the 2025 World Championship. This is a tradition jealously guarded by the various teams, despite the collective event scheduled for February 18 in a grand ceremony in London, which will only showcase the new liveries of the 10 competitors taking part in the last racing season before the regulatory overhaul. As every year, this is a period of hopes, speculation, and predictions regarding the competitiveness of the new single-seaters.
It is a moment to savor, but until the official pre-season testing take place on February 26 at the 5.412-kilometre Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain, no doubts about the performance of the cars will be dispelled and not even then will we have a clear picture of the situation. The hope is that the upcoming championship will offer the same performance convergence seen in 2024. In fact, considering that many projects have reached their limits, at least in theory, we could see an even smaller gap between the various teams on the grid. This is also due to the work being done for 2026, which has diverted resources from the 2025 projects.
The essence of sport should be the unpredictability of the final result, and in this sense, last season exceeded even the rosiest expectations. Four teams won more than three races, and seven drivers secured at least two victories. These are unprecedented numbers in Formula 1, as it is extremely rare to witness such a level playing field in the history of the most important motorsport series. Due to a series of circumstances, next year is already destined to be remembered in history, regardless of who ultimately triumphs. Let's see why
The 2025 Formula 1 season will be anything but ordinary. Let's start with the reigning world champion, Dutchman Max Verstappen. If he manages to defend his title, he will equal Michael Schumacher's record of five consecutive world championships, achieved at the start of the third millennium. Such a streak has only been possible through prolonged technical dominance. Lewis Hamilton came close during Mercedes' golden era, but an engine failure in Kuala Lumpur in 2016 and Nico Rosberg's determination interrupted what could have been a stellar sequence.
The British driver himself could break the last record he shares with Michael Schumacher. This refers to the eighth world title, which has been an unspoken obsession since that fateful night in Abu Dhabi 2021. It is this emotional drive that keeps him from hanging up his helmet, despite having nothing left to prove. As for Scuderia Ferrari, all the conditions seem to be in place for the Maranello team to write its name in the sport's history books once again, both in the Constructors' and Drivers' Championships after almost two decades. Generations of Ferrari fans have never seen the Prancing Horse triumph.
Just as it happened between Jody Scheckter's title and Michael Schumacher's triumph in 2000. It could also be the year of a new world champion, marking the crowning achievement of immense talent that needs the validation of a world title. We are talking, for example, about Charles Leclerc, a driver who has grown exponentially over the past three years and has shown consistency even when his car did not support him. He is the only driver, along with his Maranello teammate, capable of holding his own against Max Verstappen in wheel-to-wheel battles, proving that he is not intimidated by the often aggressive driving style of the four-time world champion.
There could also be glory for Lando Norris, who claims to have learned a lot from last season to the point of feeling ready to fight for his first Formula 1 world title. The British driver’s confidence stems from overcoming great struggles in the past. Learning from one's limits and mistakes is always important, but words alone mean little—proof must come on the track. If McLaren continues its extraordinary trajectory of performance growth, success for the Bristol-born driver might not just be a dream but a clear necessity.
It will be interesting to see whether that crucial “click” has happened in the English driver's mind, the one so necessary to avoid crumbling under the weight of the responsibility of "having" to win. In this case as well, a potential victory for Lando Norris would be historic for his team. The Woking-based squad last won a drivers' title with Lewis Hamilton in 2008, in the dramatic finale of the Brazilian Grand Prix at Interlagos, where Felipe Massa was world champion until just moments before the end of the race.
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