Ferrari remain F1's most iconic and most successful F1 tea꧋m with 15 drivers' titles and 16 constructors' titles.
Ferrari remain F1's most iconic and most successful F1 team with 15 drivers' titles and 16 constructors' titl🔴es.
2025 will be a big year f♓or Ferrari as they welcome Lewis Hamilton to the team. The seven-time world champion will make the shock switch from Mercedes to Ferrari, forꦦming a super-team alongside Charles Leclerc.
Ferrari narrowly missed out on the 2024 F1 Constructors’ Championship, finishing just 13 points behind McLaren. Under Frederic Vasseur, Ferrari have shown significant operational improvement, and their second major upgrade package resolved the issꦜues cause🧔d by the first in Barcelona.
Ferrari have all the ingredients to have a s꧅uccessful 2025 season.
Ferrari have competed i෴n every round of the F1 World Championship since its inception in 1950. They are the most successful F1 constructor, with 31 titles in total - 15 drivers' championships and 16 constructors' championꦉships.
Their first taste of success came in 1952, taking the title with Alberto Ascari. Thi🍸s was followed in 1953 with another title triumph for Ascari. Ferrari’s championship wins continued in the 1950s and 1960s. Niki Lauda ended their drought by winning the 1975 drivers' championship, 11 years♍ after their last victorious season in the Drivers' standings.
The 1980s and 1990s were dominated by Williams and McLaren, meaning Ferrari did not taste title success again until 1999, when they won the constructors’ championship. Michael Schumacher claimed Ferrari’s first Drivers' Championship since 1979 at the tur🌠n of the century. From that point, Ferrari became F1’s dominant force, achieving four consecutive title wins.
Schumacher was dethroned by Fernando Alonso in 2005 and was narrowly🃏 beaten by the Spaniard in his final year with the team. Kimi Räikkönen put Ferrari back on top in 2007, defeating Alonso and Lewis Hamilton. As of 2024, Raikkonen remains Ferrari’s most recent champion. Since then, several drivers have come close: Felipe Massa in 2008, Alonso in 2010 and 2012, and Sebastian Vettel in 2017 and 2018.