The Season Ferrari Finally Credibly Belonged Again
Ferrari ended the 2024 Formula One season not with a championship, but with legitimacy restored.Under FrĂ©dĂ©ric Vasseur, in his first full season as Team Principal, the Scuderia Ferrari HP reâentered the title conversation in a meaningful way for the first time since the early groundâeffect era. With the SFâ24, Ferrari fought McLaren to the final race for the Constructorsâ Championship and finished just 14 points short, securing second place in the standings with their highest points tally of the modern era. [ferrari.com]
For a team emerging from the strategic trauma of 2022 and the transitional uncertainty of 2023, 2024 represented something rarer than silverware: competitive credibility.
The Ups â Where Ferrari Rebuilt Trust and Pace
1. The SFâ24: Ferrariâs Most Complete Car in Years
The SFâ24, overseen by Enrico Cardile (Chassis Technical Director) with power unit leadership from Enrico Gualtieri, proved to be Ferrariâs most wellârounded car since the introduction of the hybrid regulations.Improvements in tyre management and raceâlong stability resolved longâstanding weaknesses that had plagued the SFâ23. While the car did not always possess the outright peak speed of its McLaren rival, it consistently delivered usable performance across a wide range of conditions and circuits. This consistency was the cornerstone of Ferrariâs title challenge. [f1i.com], [ferrari.com]
2. Charles Leclercâs Breakthrough Championship Season
Charles Leclerc delivered the finest season of his career in 2024.Victories at Monaco, Monza, and the United States Grand Prix, combined with frequent podium finishes, established Leclerc not only as Ferrariâs lead driver, but as one of the most complete competitors on the grid. His win at Monaco, in particular, represented a careerâdefining moment, ending a longârunning sequence of misfortune at his home race. [formula1.com]
Across the season, Leclerc combined his established oneâlap excellence with matured racecraft and tyre management â a clear evolution from his earlier campaigns.
3. Carlos Sainz Jr.: Consistency to the End
In what would ultimately be his final season with Ferrari, Carlos Sainz Jr. delivered an exceptionally professional campaign.Victories in Australia and Mexico City, combined with relentless points finishes, ensured Ferrari extracted maximum value from both sides of the garage. Sainzâs role as a strategic stabiliser was particularly evident during periods where Ferrariâs title hopes fluctuated midâseason. [formula1.com], [ferrari.com]
His departure at the end of the year closed one of Ferrariâs most balanced and cooperative driver partnerships in recent history.
The Downs â Where the Championship Was Ultimately Lost
1. The MidâSeason Development Misstep
Ferrariâs biggest mistake of 2024 occurred not on the pit wall, but in the factory.A midâseason aerodynamic upgrade package, introduced between Imola and Barcelona, failed to deliver the expected gains and temporarily knocked the SFâ24 out of its optimal operating window. During this period, McLaren surged ahead with the MCL38, swinging momentum decisively in their favour. [scuderiafans.com], [f1i.com]
Although Ferrari recovered strongly later in the season with corrective updates, the points lost during this phase proved decisive.
2. Qualifying Volatility in HighâPressure Weekends
Despite overall improvement, Ferrari still suffered from occasional difficulty bringing tyres into the correct temperature window during qualifying.These issues were most costly at circuits where grid position disproportionately influenced race outcome. While race pace often allowed recovery, the lost track position narrowed Ferrariâs margin of error during the title fight.
Drivers â A Rarely Aligned Pairing
The LeclercâSainz partnership reached its competitive peak in 2024.Both drivers finished consistently close on track, often minimising loss even when one side of the garage had an offâweekend. Across the season, Ferrari recorded 22 podiums, more than any other team, underscoring how both drivers contributed meaningfully to the Constructorsâ battle. [lastwordonsports.com]
Importantly, the partnership remained internally harmonious even as external pressure mounted around Sainzâs future following the announcement of Lewis Hamiltonâs arrival for 2025.
Leadership and Culture â Vasseurâs Year One Dividend
Under FrĂ©dĂ©ric Vasseur, Ferrariâs race operations showed noticeable maturity.Strategic decisionâmaking became calmer and more resilient under pressure, with fewer reactive errors compared to previous seasons. Figures such as Diego Ioverno (Sporting Director) and senior race engineers benefited from Vasseurâs emphasis on clarity of responsibility and reduced external noise.
Ferrariâs ability to stay engaged in a twoâhorse title fight until the final round would have been unthinkable just two seasons earlier.
Wider Context â The Hamilton Shadow
Although not visible on track, 2024 was also defined by the looming arrival of Lewis Hamilton.The announcement of Hamiltonâs move to Ferrari for 2025 initially threatened to destabilise the campaign, particularly regarding Carlos Sainzâs future. Instead, Ferrari largely insulated its race operation from offâtrack distraction, allowing the competitive project to continue uninterrupted. [racefans.net]
That alone represented cultural progress.
Verdict â The Season That Proved Ferrari Could Nearly Win Again
Ferrari did not win the 2024 World Championship.But it proved, conclusively, that it could.
The team delivered its highest points total, fought until the final race, and established a technical and organisational platform capable of sustaining elite performance. The failure to secure a title stemmed not from chaos or collapse, but from a single poorlyâtimed development decision.
For Ferrari, 2024 stands as the season where belief became evidence.
Discussion Prompts
- Was the ImolaâBarcelona upgrade cycle the defining moment of the title fight?
- Did Ferrari maximise what was realistically possible from the SFâ24?
- How crucial was the LeclercâSainz partnership to Ferrariâs lateâseason resilience?
Names Embedded for Encyclopaedic Linking
This entry intentionally references:- Drivers: Charles Leclerc, Carlos Sainz Jr., Lewis Hamilton
- Team leadership: Frédéric Vasseur, Diego Ioverno
- Technical leadership: Enrico Cardile, Enrico Gualtieri
- Rival context: McLaren, Mercedes