Khaleej Times

Wolff puts his team’s intergrity ahead of results

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budapest — Mercedes chief Toto Wolff on Monday hailed his team’s integrity and claimed that sportsmans­hip is more important to their brand than a ruthless pursuit of success at all costs.

In the aftermath of an incidentfi­lled, but largely procession­al, Hungarian Grand Prix, in which Lewis Hamilton slowed at the final corner to give a podium finish, as promised, to his team-mate Valtteri Bottas, Wolff delivered an emotional explanatio­n of Mercedes’s racing philosophy.

He acknowledg­ed that he and his team, especially Hamilton who kept his word and proved his own team ethic is strong, might regret giving victorious rival German Sebastian Vettel of Ferrari an extra three points advantage over the Englishman in the drivers’ title race.

But, he said: “What is the purpose of us being here? It is doing the right thing and winning in the right way — and sometimes doing it the right way and standing by your values is very tough.

“And, it was today (Sunday). I feel terrible.”

Hamilton’s act of sportsmans­hip came after Finn Bottas had earlier allowed him free passage to attack the duo of leading Ferraris in the closing stages of the race.

The three-time champion Briton caught them, but despite his speed, was unable to pass secondplac­ed Finn Kimi Raikkonen, the 2007 champion, to attack championsh­ip leader Vettel, whose victory enlarged his lead over Hamilton from one point to 14 — that would have been 11 if Hamilton had finished third.

“We don’t drive in circles because we enjoy it so much,” said Wolff. “We drive in circles because we hope that it promotes our brand and makes us sell cars and it is a very long term project.

“If you come here and you think this is what counts only, you are wrong. We have seen the backlash of decisions that were ruthless and cold-blooded and the effect it had on the brand.”

Wolff ’s explanatio­n included a thinly-veiled reference to Ferrari’s more pragmatic traditions that have seen them involved in team orders controvers­ies when one driver is told to hand a merited victory to another for the sake of the championsh­ip. —

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