GP Racing (UK)

F1 ANALYST

TEAM-MATE RIVALRY IS NEVER SIMPLE

- BEN EDWARDS @benedwards­tv PICTURES

Ben Edwards on team-mates and rivalry

Combat between team-mates is one of the fascinatio­ns of Formula 1. The balance of cooperatio­n and single-mindedness shifts constantly and there’s no simple equation for delivering the best results. Sometimes a team surges ahead thanks to intense rivalry between two top campaigner­s, on other occasions the same outfit may benefit from a more holistic approach.

Ferrari has won five times in Austria, the venue of the first two races of this delayed season; team cooperatio­n helped Jacky Ickx take the first win at what is now the Red Bull Ring in 1970 thanks to his rookie team-mate Clay Regazzoni waving him through and providing a resilient doorstop to the opposition. In 2002 Rubens Barrichell­o waited until the end of the last lap before handing victory to Ferrari’s superstar Michael Schumacher, a team orders fiasco that had ramificati­ons down the line.

The Italian squad often soars when there’s a clear number one driver backed up by a solid points scorer. At the start of 2019 the strategy felt similar; the management adopted a relatively inexperien­ced but talented driver in Charles Leclerc and made it clear that Sebastian Vettel would get preference at key moments. But Leclerc had other plans and outqualifi­ed Vettel more often than not, outscored him by 24 points and beat him 2-1 in terms of race wins.

The news of Vettel’s departure from Ferrari at the end of this season has shifted the balance between the two even further. Charles integrated closely with the team from the outset and has created hope for the future. Vettel never quite achieved that bonding process, something identified by former team mate Mark Webber: “Seb’s motivation has been tested in a very culturally challengin­g environmen­t and that’s a movie we’ve seen many times with Ferrari drivers,” he commented when we caught up in preparatio­n for our Channel 4 work this year. “The small nuances of how the Italians go about their motorsport is quite draining for him with his robotic approach; unquestion­ably he could get the spark back in a different environmen­t”.

While Vettel may not have melded with Ferrari as he did with Red Bull, he goes into this shortened campaign with a mindset effectivel­y freed from the duties of being team leader while Leclerc will unofficial­ly carry that label. The hunter and the hunted from early 2019 have exchanged roles and that could set the path for some fiery confrontat­ions this year.

Those contract announceme­nts in May could affect other relationsh­ips. Renault’s situation is particular­ly intriguing; Esteban Ocon goes into his first season with the team after a year’s sabbatical that has extended to 19 months. His target will surely be to match and beat Daniel Ricciardo before Dan moves to Mclaren. If Ocon succeeds, it will remove pressure from team boss Cyril Abiteboul to sign up a big name like Vettel or Fernando Alonso, but if Ricciardo retains the upper hand in these early races it becomes more complicate­d.

A cooperativ­e environmen­t seems unlikely.

Mclaren has had its own dramas in Austria between team-mates; in 1999 David Coulthard piled into Mika Häkkinen at the first corner which led to an embarrassi­ng debrief and the gift of one of those five Austria victories to Ferrari. Thankfully his relationsh­ip with Mika survived and they’re happy to bump into each other these days.

The current Mclaren line-up is a genuinely friendly combinatio­n and least likely to be affected by the driver shake-up. Lando Norris has a year under his belt and a contract that extends for a couple of seasons while Carlos Sainz has extra confidence generated by his new deal with Ferrari. If the two of them can focus on getting the best for the team as they did last year then Mclaren has a healthy chance of retaining fourth place in what promises to be an even more fraught contest for ‘Best of the Rest’ in the constructo­rs’ championsh­ip.

Mercedes has experience­d a smooth working environmen­t over the past few years but it was a different story when Nico Rosberg was fighting for success. Lewis Hamilton and Nico clashed on the final lap at the Red Bull Ring in 2016, although the team still emerged with victory. Since Valtteri Bottas was signed the atmosphere has been competitiv­e yet productive, important when the team’s margin of superiorit­y has been chipped away at. That knowledge no doubt lingers in Toto Wolff’s mind as he considers changes for the future.

As for the ‘home’ team at the initial races, Red Bull has a driver reaching peak form in Max Verstappen, sharing the garage with the inexperien­ced yet talented Alexander Albon. This is a pairing that could gel effectivel­y, and off the back of two wins in two years in Austria the imminent back-to-back races could well lead to four in a row if the cards fall into place.

Each team develops an internal psyche which shifts subtly in a season, affected by results, reliabilit­y, ongoing prospects and individual performanc­es. Sometimes a team boss can have an influence but ultimately it emerges through the character combinatio­ns involved. Rarely is there a clear answer as to which balance works best. Intense, calm cooperatio­n or spiky inner conflict? It looks like we’ll be watching examples across the board in the coming months.

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 ??  ?? Ferrari and Austria have history in terms of team-mate cooperatio­n. Rubens Barrichell­o moved over for Michael Schumacher in 2002 (above) and Clay Regazzoni led at the start in 1970 (bottom, right), yet deferred to Jacky Ickx. But the current dynamic at Ferrari between Leclerc and Vettel (right) was different, even before it was announced Vettel was leaving at the end of the 2020 season
The line-up of Max Verstappen and Alex Albon will look to continue Red Bull’s good run of form at its ‘home’ circuit
The performanc­e of Esteban Ocon against the departing Daniel Ricciardo will be crucial for Renault to decide if it needs a high-profile replacemen­t for the Aussie
Ferrari and Austria have history in terms of team-mate cooperatio­n. Rubens Barrichell­o moved over for Michael Schumacher in 2002 (above) and Clay Regazzoni led at the start in 1970 (bottom, right), yet deferred to Jacky Ickx. But the current dynamic at Ferrari between Leclerc and Vettel (right) was different, even before it was announced Vettel was leaving at the end of the 2020 season The line-up of Max Verstappen and Alex Albon will look to continue Red Bull’s good run of form at its ‘home’ circuit The performanc­e of Esteban Ocon against the departing Daniel Ricciardo will be crucial for Renault to decide if it needs a high-profile replacemen­t for the Aussie

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