Hamilton will be on the podium this year, says Vasseur

Hamilton will be on the podium this year, says Vasseur
Hamilton started 10th in Sunday’s Italian Grand Prix after a grid penalty and finished sixth. (AFP)
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Updated 08 September 2025

Hamilton will be on the podium this year, says Vasseur

Hamilton will be on the podium this year, says Vasseur
  • Hamilton started 10th in Sunday’s Italian Grand Prix after a grid penalty and finished sixth
  • Hamilton’s teammate Charles Leclerc was fourth on Sunday, at a circuit where he won last year, but qualified on pole in Hungary and has a season’s best of second in his home Monaco Grand Prix

MONZA: Lewis Hamilton has yet to stand on the Formula One podium as a Ferrari driver but team boss Fred Vasseur has no doubt the seven-times world champion will get there before the end of the season.
Hamilton started 10th in Sunday’s Italian Grand Prix after a grid penalty and finished sixth, with Ferrari fans showing him plenty of love on his Monza debut in the red overalls worn by so many greats before him.
Vasseur said the support had been a boost and Hamilton’s performance in following former Mercedes teammate George Russell — a race winner in Canada — across the line suggested the results would come for the 40-year-old.
“Yes, we can expect him to be on the podium,” said the Frenchman, who had also expected Ferrari to be on the podium at Monza.
Ferrari are second in the constructors’ standings, a massive 337 points behind runaway leaders McLaren, but the only team in the top four yet to win — other than Hamilton’s victory in a Saturday sprint in Shanghai in March.
There is no podium celebration after the sprint.
“I think the energy he received from the tifosi on Wednesday, Thursday in Milano was something very special for him,” Vasseur said of Hamilton, who joined from Mercedes in January and had previously raced at Monza as a Ferrari foe.
“It was something mega and I think this gave him an extra boost all over the weekend.”
Hamilton’s teammate Charles Leclerc was fourth on Sunday, at a circuit where he won last year, but qualified on pole in Hungary and has a season’s best of second in his home Monaco Grand Prix.
Vasseur said the gap to McLaren, beaten by Red Bull’s Max Verstappen on Sunday, had been close all weekend.
“I think we were in better shape this weekend, not enough because they are in front of us, but I think at least we closed the gap,” he added.
“I think we have a couple of tracks where we are supposed to be also in good shape, starting with the next one. We are historically always in good shape in Baku.
“But for sure the goal is to finish P2 in the championship. McLaren is on another planet.”
Vasseur said Ferrari were now fully focused on their 2026 engine and car, and expected other teams to have turned off the development tap.
“I think only one team brought an upgrade this weekend except the wing, because we have to adapt the car to the level of downforce, but I think for everybody now we are focused on 2026,” he added.


In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch

In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch
Updated 05 November 2025

In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch

In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch
  • The team played their first international matches at the FIFA Unites: Women’s Series late last month in Morocco
  • Twenty-year-old midfielder Mina Ahmadi said “a dream was taken away from us” back home, “but when FIFA recognized us, it was as if a part of that dream came true“

CASABLANCA: Manoozh Noori said she “wanted to die” when the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021. That meant she could no longer do what she loved most: playing football.
Noori, now 22, fled the country where the United Nations say authorities have implemented a “gender apartheid,” and has been playing in a team of Afghan refugee women, recently taking part in a first-of-its-kind tournament in Morocco.
“I had asked myself: do I want to stay in this country with people who want to forbid women from studying, from playing football, from doing anything?” Noori told AFP.
The Taliban authorities, who say that women’s rights are protected by Islamic law, have banned girls and women from schools beyond the age of 12, and also from most jobs and public services — and from playing sports.


Noori had defied family pressure to represent Afghanistan professionally by playing for the country’s national women’s squad before a Taliban government returned to power.
She said she buried her trophies and medals in her family’s backyard and left the country for Australia.
Noori’s team, Afghan Women United, was formed between Europe and Australia, where other teammates have also been living since 2021.

- ‘A beautiful story’ -

The team played their first international matches at the FIFA Unites: Women’s Series late last month in Morocco — and Noori scored the team’s first goal in the opening game against Chad.
They went on to lose both to Chad and Tunisia although they registered a big 7-0 win against Libya. But the tournament overall was a major win for the Afghan women.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino, who attended one of their games, described their participation as “a beautiful story” that the women were writing “for so many girls and women all over the world.”
Nilab Mohammadi, a 28-year-old striker and former soldier who also represented the Afghan national team, said football was “not just a sport — it represents life and hope.”
“There is no more freedom in Afghanistan, especially for Afghan women,” Mohammadi added. “But now, we are going to be their voice.”
Twenty-year-old midfielder Mina Ahmadi said “a dream was taken away from us” back home, “but when FIFA recognized us, it was as if a part of that dream came true.”
“This new adventure is a happy moment for us,” added Ahmadi, who is now studying medical sciences in Australia.
“It won’t stop anytime soon, because we will keep moving forward.”

- ‘Just to play football’ -

FIFA has yet to decide whether the refugee team can compete in official international matches as representing Afghanistan, but the players remain determined to get there.
The Afghan Women United now have one goal: to have the squad recognized by FIFA as the Afghan national women’s team since women in the country are not allowed to play the game.
“These women are incredible,” said Aish Ravi, a researcher on gender equity in sports who worked with several of the players when they first arrived in Australia in 2021.
“They are strong and inspiring,” she added. “They’ve had to overcome enormous adversity just to play football.
“This sport is more than a game,” Ravi said. “It symbolizes freedom for them.”
Ahmadi said she dreamed of playing in Europe one day, but being far from home can prove difficult.
“It’s very hard to get used to a country where you didn’t grow up,” she said. “You miss your family and friends... But we have to keep moving forward.”