Daily Dispatch

GLOVES OFF

Clash of Formula One titans on Sunday

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Mercedes team chief Toto Wolff may have seen his world champion team claim victory in the season-opening Austrian Grand Prix, but he still insists the “gloves are off” when the duel for supremacy with rivals Red Bull resumes on Sunday.

Valtteri Bottas gave Mercedes a pole-to-flag win at the Red Bull Ring last weekend as the 2020 championsh­ip finally roared into life.

However, teammate and world champion Lewis Hamilton was fourth after facing two protests from Red Bull on the eve of the race over his qualifying tactics.

Hamilton was relegated from second to fifth on the grid before a late collision with Red Bull’s Alex Albon torpedoed his hopes of a podium, despite finishing second on the track.

“We were lucky to finish the race and reliabilit­y is a real concern. We are working it as our highest priority,” admitted Wolff.

But stung by the daily protests from Red Bull, he warned rival team chief Christian Horner and his team: “It’s serious now. Gloves off. No more nice stuff — we are in a real fight to win.

“So, in a short and intense season like this, with a yet-tobe-determined number of races, every point is going to count.”

The second race of the season takes place at the same biosecure Spielberg circuit nestled in the foothills of the Styrian Alps.

Not surprising­ly, this weekend’s race has been named in honour of the spectacula­r mountain range.

Having watched from the pitlane as Bottas claimed his third victory for Mercedes on one of his favourite tracks, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen wants better luck this weekend.

The Dutchman, forced to retire early from the Austrian Grand Prix with electrical problems, hopes to live up to Horner’s pledge that Red Bull will treat every race “like a cup final” by taking the fight to rivals Mercedes.

“We were a bit down on pace compared with Mercedes in qualifying last time,” Verstappen said. “So we need to close the gap to fight them in that area, rather than on strategy.

“I was looking good for a podium, which I thought was easily possible because it was basically between Mercedes and myself on raw pace, but then you should also look at how the whole race panned out.

“We could have scored a good number of points against Lewis, but it is what it is. We can’t change it so now I’m looking forward hopefully to a more positive weekend.”

Horner felt aggrieved by Verstappen’s misfortune and by Albon’s late clash with six-time world champion Hamilton, which cost the Mercedes driver a podium finish, as he was given a five-second penalty, but knocked the Thai driver out of contention.

This weekend, Horner is promising an even more aggressive approach — when Red Bull protested against Mercedes on every day of the Grand Prix — and is bidding for victory.

“Last week, I think a win could have been on the cards, ”h said. “We were strategica­lly sharp, very strong and it was a shame we won no points.

“Mercedes have done a good job over the winter, as we saw in testing. Engine-wise, they look strong, but I think the RB16 is a very, very good car.

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 ?? Picture: MARK THOMPSON/ REUTERS ?? VICTORY: Mercedes’s Finnish driver, Valtteri Bottas, celebrates on the podium after the Austrian Formula One Grand Prix race in Spielberg, Austria.
Picture: MARK THOMPSON/ REUTERS VICTORY: Mercedes’s Finnish driver, Valtteri Bottas, celebrates on the podium after the Austrian Formula One Grand Prix race in Spielberg, Austria.

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