Your cart is empty
Sport 20 November 2025
Power Plays, Ferrari & mercedes!
F1's Guenther Steiner Talks With Lottoland
LOTTOLAND INTERVIEW WITH GUENTHER STEINER
- HAMILTON’S FERRARI MOVE: DEFINING HIS LEGACY
- VERSTAPPEN’S CHAMPIONSHIP PURSUIT AND STRATEGIC ADVANTAGE
- MCLAREN’S ‘TOO FAIR’ POLICY: WHEN EQUALITY BECOMES A WEAKNESS
- A VOICE THAT STILL CUTS THROUGH THE NOISE
HAMILTON’S FERRARI MOVE: DEFINING HIS LEGACY
First up in Guenther Steiner's chat with Lottoland Sportsbook was Lewis Hamilton’s decision to leave the security of Mercedes for Ferrari’s iconic red, Steiner doesn’t hesitate: it’s a bold move. He praises Ferrari’s heritage but remains realistic about their recent struggles to return to dominance.
“Mercedes is a well-oiled machine, a place of high certainty,” Steiner says. “Ferrari, on the other hand, needs to be rebuilt around Hamilton.”
He sees the move as far more than just a transfer of a star driver. For Hamilton to succeed, Ferrari must rally completely around him-from technical direction to team culture. It’s a massive rebuild, and all roads must lead to making Hamilton competitive again.
If it works, Steiner believes it could stand as one of the greatest comeback stories in F1 history. If it fails, it risks defining the twilight of Hamilton’s career. Either way, it’s a bold, legacy-defining bet.
VERSTAPPEN’S CHAMPIONSHIP PURSUIT AND STRATEGIC ADVANTAGE
Turning to the current championship, Steiner shares the consensus that Max Verstappen looks unstoppable. But what intrigues him more is how that dominance translates into power beyond the track.
“Verstappen is almost guaranteed to win the championship, and that gives him immense leverage in any contract negotiation,” Steiner notes. While Red Bull remains a powerhouse, he believes Verstappen now holds all the cards.
“He can dictate his destination and his price. Red Bull needs him more than he needs Red Bull.”
In Steiner’s eyes, Verstappen has reached the peak of his influence-he’s not just Red Bull’s lead driver but the foundation of the entire operation. Every choice he makes from here could reshape the competitive landscape of Formula 1 for years to come.
MCLAREN’S ‘TOO FAIR’ POLICY: WHEN EQUALITY BECOMES A WEAKNESS
When the discussion turns to McLaren’s approach of treating Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri as equals, Steiner’s verdict is typically blunt: “It’s too fair-and that could be a weakness.”
While F1 is a team sport, Steiner argues that success often depends on having a clear hierarchy. “You need a number one driver, a focal point around which you build your race strategy and team structure,” he explains.
He respects McLaren’s commitment to fairness but warns that an overly balanced approach can lead to indecision, diluted resources, and lost opportunities when the pressure is on. In a championship fight, clarity and focus often outweigh moral symmetry.
The question, he says, is whether McLaren’s philosophy will prove a noble route to long-term success-or an idealistic restraint that prevents them from truly challenging for titles.
A VOICE THAT STILL CUTS THROUGH THE NOISE
As always, Guenther Steiner’s analysis cuts through the surface to the human side of Formula 1- power, ambition, and strategy. His commentary reminds us that behind every lap time lies a web of choices and consequences.
As the season unfolds, the sport will test Hamilton’s decision, Verstappen’s leverage, and McLaren’s fairness to see which philosophy truly drives success in modern Formula 1.
T
by
Tom