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Lewis Hamilton crashes out of Dutch Grand Prix in new Ferrari low

The 40-year-old Ferrari driver lost control of his car at Zandvoort and slammed his car into the wall

Kieran Jackson
Formula 1 Correspondent
Sunday 31 August 2025 17:20 BST
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Lewis Hamilton reacts after crashing out of Dutch GP

Lewis Hamilton crashed out of the Dutch Grand Prix on Sunday in a new low amid his wretched start at Ferrari.

The seven-time F1 world champion, positioned in seventh place, crashed into the wall at the banked turn-three at Zandvoort on lap 24 of the race.

Rain was falling lightly, which made a section of the track slippery, but Hamilton acknowledged on team radio that it was a driver error.

Hamilton crashed out of the race at Zandvoort on lap 24
Hamilton crashed out of the race at Zandvoort on lap 24 (Sky Sports F1)

“I’m so sorry guys,” he said, as he left the cockpit unharmed.

The day later went from bad to worse for Ferrari as Charles Leclerc also crashed out, after being hit by Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli.

Hamilton later said in the media pen: “I’m really not sure [what happened], will have to look back at it. As I went up the bank, the rear snapped out and I couldn’t recover it.

“The car was a bit twitchy but I think we made real progress this weekend. My pace was looking pretty decent. I was catching George [Russell].

“But so unusual not to finish a race. It’s definitely not great, but it is what it is.”

Hamilton is yet to finish on the podium for Ferrari in his first 15 races for the team and, prior to the summer break, was despondent about his form.

The 40-year-old described his display at the last round in Hungary as “useless” and even stated that Ferrari should look to replace him.

Lewis Hamilton retired from the Dutch GP on Sunday
Lewis Hamilton retired from the Dutch GP on Sunday (Getty Images)

Hamilton moved to Ferrari ahead of the 2025 season after six titles and 12 years at Mercedes, but has struggled for performance. Aside from a sprint race win in China, his best-finish in a grand prix is fourth place.

Oscar Piastri ended up winning the race after Lando Norris retired late on, with Max Verstappen finishing second and Isack Hadjar picking up his first podium in F1.

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