Ferrari doesn’t deserve my talent. Going to Ferrari would only be a step back in my career…” — Lando Norris publicly criticized Formula 1, calling Ferrari a “slow machine” when asked about the possibility of joining the team.

Ferrari’s young talent Charles Leclerc immediately responded with just ten words, leaving Lando Norris speechless, utterly humiliated and mercilessly ridiculed by the whole world…
The Formula 1 world runs on drama, rivalry and the occasional razor-sharp verbal outburst. Exactly that happened last week, when Lando Norris, the McLaren driver who recently won his first world title, did not mince his words in an interview about a possible switch to Ferrari.
The British rider, who showed this season that he belongs to the absolute top, was asked directly whether a switch to the iconic red-black team from Maranello fit into his future plans. His answer was not only clear, but also remarkably sharp and condescending.

“Ferrari doesn’t deserve my talent,” Norris declared without hesitation. “Going to Ferrari would only be a step back in my career.
It’s a slow machine, and I don’t feel like sacrificing my progress to a team that has struggled for years to consistently compete for wins, let alone titles.” The words fell like a bomb in the paddock.
Norris, who was long seen as a driver with enormous potential but without the right car to really shine, has quickly emerged as someone who is not afraid to use tough language.
His 2025 title came after a dominant season in which McLaren had the fastest car, but Norris himself acknowledges that his driving style and mentality made the difference.

The statement about Ferrari as a “slow machine” was extra painful because historically the team is synonymous with speed, passion and prestige. Yet Ferrari has indeed suffered from ups and downs in recent years: inconsistent performance, strategic blunders and engine problems have given the tifosi many gray hairs.
Charles Leclerc, the team’s great hope for years, has repeatedly shown that he is capable of masterful races, but he was often let down by the car or the pit wall.
The fact that Norris made exactly that point – and suggested that Ferrari would not be good enough for someone of his caliber – felt to many like a direct attack on the brand and on Leclerc personally.

It didn’t take long for Charles Leclerc to respond. The Monegasque, normally calm and diplomatic in interviews, this time opted for a short but scathing response on social media. In just ten words he wrote: “Talk on, champion. I’m still racing in the car you think is too slow.”
That one sentence hit like a hammer blow. Suddenly the ball had completely bounced back to Norris. Where the McLaren driver had expressed an entire paragraph full of criticism, Leclerc countered with maximum effect with minimal words.
The message was clear: Norris may have become world champion, but he did so in a dominant car, while Leclerc has been performing for years in a machine that often falls short. The implied comparison was brutal – and the F1 community loved it.
Within hours, the internet exploded. On X (formerly Twitter), #Leclerc10words trended worldwide. Leclerc fans celebrated the Monegasque as a master of understated shade. “Charles said more in ten words than Lando said in his entire career,” wrote a popular F1 account.
Others pointed out that Leclerc had already achieved multiple pole positions and victories in lesser cars, while Norris only really started winning when McLaren built the reigning champion car.
Memes sprang up like mushrooms: photos of Leclerc with a microphone and the text “keep talking”, or Norris sitting silently in his cockpit with the caption “speechless”.
Even neutral observers had to admit that Leclerc had won the moral victory. Norris, who normally comes across as charming and self-deprecating, seemed genuinely touched for the first time.
In later interviews he remained silent on the issue or waved it away with a “it’s just an opinion,” but the damage had been done.
His words about Ferrari now suddenly sounded a lot less confident. Had he overestimated himself? Or was he simply unlucky that Leclerc hit back so accurately?
For Ferrari itself, the riot came at an interesting time. The team is on the eve of major rule changes in 2026, with new engines and revised aerodynamics. Lewis Hamilton will then drive alongside Leclerc, a combination that on paper has explosive potential.
If Ferrari can finally build the car to match that talent, Norris’s “step back” comment could make a painful return. Leclerc just needs to get results to prove Norris wrong – and given his track record, that doesn’t seem like an impossible task.
The whole affair underlines how ruthless Formula 1 can be. Talent alone is not enough; you also have to have the right car, choose the right time and – just as importantly – say the right words at the right time. Lando Norris learned that lesson the hard way.
His criticism of Ferrari may have been fair, but Charles Leclerc’s answer was brilliant in its simplicity. Ten words, that’s all it took to put a world champion in his place.
The rivalry between these two drivers has only become more intense in recent seasons. Norris won the title, but Leclerc won this verbal battle – and in Formula 1 every victory counts, including those off the track.
It is doubtful whether Norris will ever dare to repeat that Ferrari does not deserve his talent. One thing is certain: the tifosi have a new hero storyline, and Charles Leclerc has just proven that he is not only fast on the track, but off it too.