The Chronicle (South Tyneside and Durham)

Wolff mystified by such a grim start to season

‘BRUTALLY PAINFUL’ SITUATION

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TOTO Wolff admitted it was a “fair question” whether he remained the right person to lead Mercedes – after Lewis Hamilton’s worst ever start to a season was confirmed at the Australian Grand Prix.

Carlos Sainz delivered the best drive of his career, just 16 days after surgery for appendicit­is, to take advantage of Max Verstappen’s shock first retirement in two years to lead home a Ferrari one-two finish from Charles Leclerc.

But over at Mercedes, Hamilton’s afternoon ended on the 17th lap when his engine expired as teammate George Russell crashed out.

Hamilton, who qualified 11th, has taken just eight points from the opening three rounds. His previous worst start to a season had been in 2009 when he was disqualifi­ed at the first round before finishing sixth and seventh.

Before yesterday’s retirement, Hamilton had begun the year by crossing the line only seventh and ninth in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia respective­ly.

Mercedes carried Hamilton – who is heading to Ferrari next year – to six of his seven world championsh­ips, but the British driver has not won a race since the penultimat­e round of the 2021 campaign, 58 rounds ago.

Last year, Hamilton finished second in Melbourne, but Russell, who was the fastest Mercedes driver in Melbourne this weekend, was only seventh when he crashed.

Wolff, who has been team principal at Mercedes since 2013, was asked if he should remain in his role.

“As a corner of this business, I need to make sure my contributi­on is positive and creative so I would be the first one to say if somebody has a better idea, tell me because I am invested to turn this team around as quickly as possible,” the 52-year-old replied.

“We have not swallowed a dumb pill since 2021. We don’t understand some of the behaviours of the car and in the past we would.

“I look at myself in the mirror every single day about everything I do and it is a fair question. But it (leaving) is not what I feel that I should do at the moment.”

Mercedes arrived for the season armed with a car they thought would enable them to return to the front. But the Silver Arrows are now behind not just Red Bull, but Ferrari and Mclaren in the pecking order, too.

An honest Wolff continued: “We started this season in the belief that this car was better than last year.

“Everything I have done before, in finance and investment, you know which screws to turn and you know sometimes it takes time. Here, I don’t think we are missing things. It is just a complicati­on that is happening with the car that we cannot see, and it is like an on-off switch.

“You see the progress that Mclaren and Ferrari have made, so on one side, I want to punch myself on the nose. We have got to really dig deep because it is brutally painful.”

Despite his poor weekend in Melbourne, Hamilton was upbeat. His pain perhaps soothed by Ferrari’s impressive display at Albert Park.

“Surprising­ly I feel pretty good,” said Hamilton, with Wolff also admitting his soon-to-be-departing driver “is looking over the fence” at Ferrari’s impressive performanc­es.

“I’m trying to keep things in perspectiv­e because things could be so much worse.”

Despite the brake failure on lap four that ended his bid for a recordequa­lling 10 straight wins, Verstappen still remains in charge of the championsh­ip with a four-point lead over Leclerc, ahead of the next round in Japan on April 7.

 ?? ?? Yuki Tsunoda of Japan leads Lewis Hamilton at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne. Hamilton is having his worst ever start to a season
Yuki Tsunoda of Japan leads Lewis Hamilton at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne. Hamilton is having his worst ever start to a season
 ?? ?? Toto Wolff
Toto Wolff

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