Motorsports
Former McLaren boss: ‘I wish Hamilton had retired then’
Former McLaren communications chief Matt Bishop has analyzed Lewis Hamilton’s decision not to withdraw from Formula 1 after his dramatic defeat in Abu Dhabi in 2021.
Bishop worked at McLaren from 2008 to 2017, during which time Hamilton won his first world championship. The 63-year-old Briton has repeatedly praised the driver’s career both on and off the track, but expressed his conflicting views in a column in Motor Sport Magazine dedicated to the seven-time world champion’s 41st birthday.
According to Bishop, given the events of recent seasons, he thinks Hamilton should leave Formula 1 immediately after the finale of the 2021 season.
“But sometimes, given what happened next — in other words, as he rarely had a fully competitive car in 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025 — I wish he had chosen a different path when he emerged from self-imposed isolation on January 7, 2022, his 37th birthday,” Bishop wrote.
“It may be selfish, but I would like him to follow the example of one of his best teammates, Nico Rosberg, who retired at the peak of his career after winning the 2016 F1 World Championship, having achieved his ultimate goal and knowing that the cost of staying there may exceed the reward.”
The peak for Lewis will be Abu Dhabi in 2021. We all know that it was not because he won the Formula 1 World Championship there, but on the contrary, that he was deprived of victory there. Because he deserved it there, on the track, with his skills, with his results and with his spirit.”
Source: Sport UA
Ruth Waterhouse is an author and sports journalist who writes for Sportish. She is known for her coverage of various sports events and her insightful analysis of sports-related news. With a passion for sports and a keen eye for detail, she has become a respected voice in the sports community.
Motorsports
The return of Dakar. The seventh stage ended with the leader’s drama
The 7th stage of Dakar 2026, which returned after a one-day break, took place today, January 11. Ford driver Matthias Ekstrjom won the stage after race leader Henk Lategan had a problem in the last part of the stage and lost more than 10 minutes.
Lategan, who was 1 minute and 46 seconds ahead of Ekstrjom before the last checkpoint, had the chance to win the stage and become the leader in the general classification. However, he lost all his advantage in the 459 km distance between Riyadh and Wadi Ad-Dawasir due to shock absorber failure and finished only 13th, 8 minutes and 35 seconds behind Ekstrjom.
Ekstrom won the stage by 4 minutes and 27 seconds over Toyota driver Joao Ferreira, while his Ford teammate Mitch Guthrie finished third. Toyota’s Toby Price lost just six seconds on lap four, ahead of Dacia duo Lucas Moraes and Sebastien Loeb.
Implications for the general classification: Dacia driver Nasser Al-Attiyah maintained his lead by taking 11th place in the stage, but his advantage fell to 4 minutes and 47 seconds ahead of Ekstrjem, who is now his main pursuer. While Ford driver Nani Roma took the third place in the general classification, Lategan fell to the fourth place, 7 minutes and 21 seconds behind. Carlos Sainz Sr. He finished the stage in fifth place with Ford.
Results of stage 7:
Score after stage 7:
Source: Sport UA
Ruth Waterhouse is an author and sports journalist who writes for Sportish. She is known for her coverage of various sports events and her insightful analysis of sports-related news. With a passion for sports and a keen eye for detail, she has become a respected voice in the sports community.
Motorsports
Good news for Hamilton. Ferrari will solve this in 2026
Italian sources say that the changes to the Ferrari SF-26 for the 2026 season could be good news for Lewis Hamilton.
The seven-time champion in his first season with the Scuderia could only reach the top step of the podium after the sprint in China; His teammate Charles Leclerc reached the podium seven times in 2025.
Despite the Monegasque’s relative success last season, both he and Hamilton have repeatedly criticized the SF-25. Pilots complained about problems with the steering wheel, unbalanced clutch and the chassis as a whole. At one stage in 2025, Leclerc described the car as “uncontrollable” at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
According to La Gazzetta dello Sport, Ferrari’s new 2026 car is designed primarily to solve last season’s key problems, including difficulties warming up tires and a chronic lack of grip in critical conditions.
Another plus for Hamilton is that the SF-26 is the first car he and former Mercedes technical director Loïc Serra had the opportunity to work on after joining Ferrari.
The team’s aim is to create a predictable and stable car that does not lose performance and remains controllable when grip levels on the track change. This is expected to have a positive impact on both Hamilton and Leclerc.
Hamilton’s age (41) means he is just a few seasons away from winning his eighth world title, so the success of the Ferrari SF-26 will be critical for the Briton.
Source: Sport UA
Ruth Waterhouse is an author and sports journalist who writes for Sportish. She is known for her coverage of various sports events and her insightful analysis of sports-related news. With a passion for sports and a keen eye for detail, she has become a respected voice in the sports community.
Motorsports
Red Bull pilot plans to continue cooperation with the Japanese giant
Japan’s Yuki Tsunoda has expressed his desire to continue his collaboration with Honda even after losing his place in the Red Bull squad.
Tsunoda will be the reserve driver of the Milton Keynes team in 2026, assisting Max Verstappen and Isak Hajjar.
At the same time, Honda officially returns to Formula 1 as Aston Martin’s power unit supplier and ends its technical partnership with Red Bull.
Honda played an important role in Tsunoda’s career, supporting him in the junior series and on his path to F1. The pilot thanked the Japanese manufacturer for its support for many years.
“I appreciate your support over the years. We’ll see how it goes, but I really appreciate how many people have supported me.”
“Next year we will go a little bit different way. But we will still be close and see how we can continue the collaboration.”
Source: Sport UA
Ruth Waterhouse is an author and sports journalist who writes for Sportish. She is known for her coverage of various sports events and her insightful analysis of sports-related news. With a passion for sports and a keen eye for detail, she has become a respected voice in the sports community.
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