The Herald (South Africa)

Reliabilit­y key in shortened F1 season, says Wolff

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Reliabilit­y will be fundamenta­l in deciding who emerges on top in the shortened Formula One season, with less margin for error due to the lighter schedule, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff said.

Originally scheduled for 22 grands prix, only eight tightly controlled races have so far been confirmed, with the season to get under way in Austria behind closed doors over the next two weekends.

Reigning champion Lewis

Hamilton and his rivals will hit the circuit tomorrow for the first time since Barcelona testing in February, and Wolff warns they will need to hit the ground running.

“This new calendar and the coronaviru­s throw new challenges at us,” the 48-year-old Mercedes team principal said.

The original opening race in Australia was cancelled at the last-minute after five crew members were quarantine­d when displaying symptoms consistent with Covid-19.

“Reliabilit­y is going to be a fundamenta­l part of the first races.

“The cars have come out of the containers straight from Australia,” Wolff said.

“There is not a lot of time to run them and we will be using every session to learn.

“So a reduced race calendar is a challenge for everybody.”

Mercedes also launched their innovative dual axis steering, which can widen or narrow the distance between the front wheels.

Mercedes will be wary of a slow start, however, after their drivers managed just fifth and eighth in 2019 at the Red Bull Ring following a rare double retirement the year before.

Ferrari’s cars are the only ones not to have beaten their 2019 times in 2020 testing.

“We’re not favourites, that’s for sure,” Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc said.

Team Haas chief Gunther

Steiner also said it would be crucial not to make any early mistakes.

“That is one of the things that we focus on, not to make mistakes,” he said.

“Every mistake you make counts more because you have got less opportunit­ies to make up for it.

“No mistakes will not happen, but that is what we focus on to keep consistent.”

Steiner said Haas had nothing new to match Mercedes’s dual axle, but suggested innovation­s could be sometimes problemati­c.

“That’s part of why we decided we are not going to develop big upgrades or anything.

“Because every time you make an upgrade, it takes time to learn about it and how to use it,” the Italian added.

“Having not only fewer races, but in a short space of time, one of the most important things is not to make mistakes at any time. ”—

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