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Charles Leclerc Explains Why He Fell Behind at Canadian GP

Highlights

  • Hamilton out-qualified Leclerc in sprint and main qualifying sessions.
  • Hamilton overtook Verstappen to finish second, Ferrari career best.
  • Leclerc finished fourth, over 30 seconds behind Hamilton.
  • Leclerc blamed lack of confidence, not car setup, for pace gap.
  • Hamilton improved preparation after Miami, boosting speed in Canada.
  • Ferrari struggles raise questions on performance for upcoming races.

Lewis Hamilton sets the pace for Ferrari in Montreal, out-performing Charles Leclerc across sprint and Grand Prix qualifying, then finishing second after a late overtake on Max Verstappen.

The result marks Hamilton’s best finish since joining Ferrari. Leclerc places fourth, more than half a minute behind, underscoring a clear intra-team performance split at the Canadian Grand Prix.

Leclerc attributes the deficit primarily to confidence and driving feel rather than setup. He estimates only around a tenth of a second is linked to configuration, negligible at this level.

Charles Leclerc reflects on Ferrari’s pace deficit during the Canadian GP weekend
Image Credit: The SportsRush
“There’s none of the performance we are seeing today down to a set-up,” Leclerc says, putting the gap down to feel and confidence.

Lacking that confidence, Leclerc says he cannot consistently push to the limit, which compounds the deficit over a stint and amplifies the headline gap to Hamilton.

“By not having the feeling, you don’t push a car to its limits… I’m completely off the pace,” Leclerc admits after Montreal.

Hamilton, meanwhile, refines his preparation after issues correlating simulator data at Miami. The adjustments appear effective, lifting one-lap sharpness and race execution in Canada.

The late-race pass on Verstappen fits a broader trend of improved decisiveness and tyre management, echoing themes from the recent Hamilton–Verstappen battle analysis.

Ferrari’s overall picture is mixed. Carlos Sainz struggles to match the leaders, while Hamilton’s form highlights potential gains if confidence and correlation improve across the garage.

Hamilton’s P2 in Montreal stands as his best Ferrari finish to date, reinforcing his 2026 title credentials.

The team must convert setup windows into predictable driver feel to stabilise performance. Leclerc’s comments echo his broader Canadian GP assessment on confidence sensitivity.

Front-running intensity remains high with Verstappen a constant benchmark. Hamilton’s surge adds intrigue to the 2026 season, while Leclerc targets a reset before the next rounds.

Visual Summary



LECLERC
HAMILTON

P2

P4 +30s

Hamilton Surges Ahead

Pace & Confidence Create a 30-Second Gap


🚗
Leclerc


🚗


Hamilton

“By not having the feeling, you don’t push a car to its limits… I can feel I’m completely off the pace.”
— Charles Leclerc

Hamilton’s Pace
Leclerc Trailing

Confidence = Pace.
Hamilton’s new approach brings results.
Leclerc must regroup for the coming championship battles.

Daniel miller author image

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.

Daniel miller author image
Daniel Miller

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.

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