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The Season Ferrari Thought It Had Won​

Ferrari entered the 2022 Formula One season believing the long wait was over.

The return of ground‑effect regulations reset the competitive order, and the F1‑75 immediately emerged as one of the fastest cars on the grid. Under the leadership of Mattia Binotto, Ferrari started the year not as underdogs, but as favourites — a position it had not held with genuine credibility since the early hybrid era. With Charles Leclerc at the peak of his early career and Carlos Sainz Jr. entering his second season in red, Ferrari appeared balanced, fast, and ready.

What followed was not a collapse — but something more damaging: a slow erosion of trust, both internally and externally. By season’s end, Ferrari would finish a distant second in the Constructors’ Championship, having transformed a title‑winning platform into a lesson in lost control.


The Ups – When Ferrari Looked Like Champions​

1. The F1‑75: A Front‑Running Concept​

Ferrari’s greatest achievement in 2022 was conceptual.

Designed under the technical direction of Enrico Cardile (Chassis) and with power unit leadership from Enrico Gualtieri, the F1‑75 was aerodynamically sophisticated, mechanically compliant, and inherently fast. Early in the season, Ferrari could challenge Red Bull Racing on equal terms — often beating them outright.

The car’s distinctive sidepod philosophy, strong front‑end grip, and effective tyre warm‑up made it formidable in qualifying and controllable in race trim, particularly on street circuits and medium‑speed layouts.


2. Charles Leclerc’s Early‑Season Authority​

For the opening phase of the season, Charles Leclerc was the benchmark.

Victories in Bahrain and Australia, combined with a pole‑to‑win dominance on tracks that rewarded outright pace, placed Leclerc at the centre of the championship narrative. His performances suggested not just speed, but a driver capable of controlling races — an essential trait in the modern era.

At one point, Leclerc held a clear points lead over Max Verstappen, and Ferrari controlled both championships on merit.


3. A Competitive Driver Pairing​

Unlike previous Ferrari eras defined by internal hierarchy, 2022 began with genuine equality.

Carlos Sainz Jr., supported by race engineer Riccardo Adami, brought stability, technical clarity, and cooperative racecraft. His maiden Formula One victory, achieved under complex circumstances, reinforced Ferrari’s belief that both sides of the garage were capable of delivering results.

The Leclerc–Sainz pairing functioned with professionalism and mutual respect, keeping intra‑team conflict out of an already pressure‑filled environment.


The Downs – Where the Season Slipped Beyond Reach​

1. Strategy Breakdown and the Loss of Confidence​

Ferrari’s most visible weakness in 2022 lay on the pit wall.

Under Sporting Director Inaki Rueda, Ferrari produced a sequence of race strategy calls that repeatedly compromised strong positions. High‑profile misjudgements — particularly in Monaco, Silverstone, Hungary, and France — cost Ferrari wins, podiums, and crucial points.

More damaging than the points lost was the erosion of driver trust. Radio messages from Leclerc increasingly reflected uncertainty rather than collaboration, a subtle but decisive shift in a close title fight.


2. Reliability Failures at the Worst Possible Moments​

While Red Bull struggled with reliability early in the year, Ferrari’s own power unit issues arrived later — and proved fatal.

Failures while leading or contending for victory shattered momentum and forced Ferrari into a reactive posture. The very strength of Ferrari’s power unit, aggressively exploited early, became a vulnerability as the season progressed.

These failures were especially costly given the cost‑cap environment, where aggressive corrections carry long‑term consequences.


3. The Collapse of the Championship Fight​

By mid‑season, the championship narrative had changed.

Max Verstappen, supported by Red Bull’s relentlessly consistent execution under Christian Horner and Adrian Newey, built an insurmountable advantage — not through constant dominance, but through Ferrari’s inability to capitalise on opportunity.

Ferrari did not lose the title in one race. It lost it through accumulated indecision.


Drivers – Diverging Seasons Under the Same Banner​

Charles Leclerc​

Leclerc’s 2022 season was defined by contrast.

At his best, he was the fastest driver on the grid. At his worst, he bore the emotional cost of squandered opportunity. Despite finishing second in the Drivers’ Championship, the season marked a psychological turning point — the first time Leclerc experienced a title challenge collapse caused not by pace, but by execution.


Carlos Sainz Jr.​

Sainz’s season was more uneven but no less important.

He played the role Ferrari needed: a dependable points scorer, a tactical asset, and a stabilising presence when the championship slipped away. However, his campaign was also hampered by qualifying inconsistency, limiting his capacity to influence the title fight when Ferrari most needed strategic leverage.


Management and Structural Fallout​

The consequences of 2022 extended beyond the track.

Despite finishing second in both championships, Ferrari’s leadership concluded that execution standards were insufficient. The season ended with Mattia Binotto’s departure, closing a tenure that produced technical excellence but failed to manage pressure at championship scale.

Senior Ferrari figures, including John Elkann and Benedetto Vigna, pivoted toward structural reform rather than incremental correction — a decision that would define Ferrari’s trajectory from 2023 onward.


Wider Context – Opportunity Missed, Not Lost​

Ferrari’s 2022 season stands apart from later disappointments because it was not built on hope — but on proof.

The car was fast.
The drivers were capable.
The regulations were aligned.

What Ferrari lacked was the ability to close, a trait that cannot be engineered — only learned.


Verdict – The Costliest Ferrari Season of the Modern Era​

Ferrari did not fail in 2022.

It let a championship escape.

More than any other season in your archive so far, 2022 represents the moment Ferrari’s modern identity fractured. It exposed cultural, strategic, and leadership gaps that would echo through 2023, undermine 2024 ambitions, and shape every cautious decision thereafter.

Understanding Ferrari after 2022 is impossible without understanding this season.


Discussion Prompts​

  • Was Ferrari’s title challenge lost on the pit wall rather than the track?
  • Could stronger leadership have protected Leclerc’s momentum?
  • Was 2022 a one‑off chance Ferrari may not see again under that regulation set?

āœ… Names Embedded for Future Linking​

This entry deliberately includes:

  • Drivers: Charles Leclerc, Carlos Sainz Jr.
  • Team leadership: Mattia Binotto, Inaki Rueda, Benedetto Vigna, John Elkann
  • Technical leaders: Enrico Cardile, Enrico Gualtieri
  • Contextual rivals: Max Verstappen, Christian Horner, Adrian Newey
All positioned cleanly for encyclopaedic cross‑linking.
 

Kimi Antonelli Poll

  • already championship‑calibre

    Votes: 3 60.0%
  • need a season of resistance first

    Votes: 2 40.0%

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