The Guardian (USA)

‘I like ego but it needs to be channelled’: Toto Wolff on how he harnessed Hamilton’s ability

- Giles Richards

F1 Racing Confidenti­al: Inside Stories from the World of Formula One, peers under the bonnet to reveal the sport’s characters from big names such as Toto Wolff and Lando Norris to the unsung engineers and strategist­s who keep the show on the road

‘One of the advantages and perhaps disadvanta­ges of my character is that I take everything personally,” Toto Wolff says. “When I joined, the team became my tribe; it was all-encompassi­ng. Every day, the minute I woke up to the minute I fell asleep it was all I did. Caring about the people, about what we needed to be in order to be successful.”

At 52, Wolff shoulders a Mercedes team that has been at the very top of F1 and also fighting to return to those heights. In 2013 – when he joined – it employed about 520 people at the Mercedes High Performanc­e Powertrain­s engine facility in Brixworth and 660 at the Mercedes F1 team. Today the total number across the organisati­on is 2,500, while sponsorshi­p revenue has grown from £50m a year to more than £300m. Yet Wolff insists the challenge, the intensity of competitio­n, is carried lightly.

“I have never felt pressure,” he says. “I take calculated risks that mean I can cope with the worst outcome. If the worst outcome would really influence the quality of my life I would not take the decision. If you have the tough moments in your life that everyone has, F1 is a walk in the park in comparison.”

When Wolff joined Mercedes, Lewis Hamilton also switched from McLaren. He would win a title in 2014 and deliver five more by 2020; the team would take eight constructo­rs’ championsh­ips between 2014 and 2021. But there are two drivers in every team and handling their relationsh­ip is key. Wolff entered driver management in the early part of his career as coowner of a sports management company that counted Pastor Maldonado, Bruno Senna, Rubens Barrichell­o and Nico Hülkenberg among its clients. Advancing their careers was his aim. At Mercedes, however, the task has been altogether different.

Wolff brought his overarchin­g philosophy of team above all to bear. “Because Lewis and Nico [Rosberg] were big stars and I was relatively new to F1, it was an interestin­g journey for me,” he says. “But straight from the beginning I said to them and to everyone that I am not having two superstars; I have a thousand superstars. I register no difference between any single employee and the drivers.”

Hamilton and Rosberg clashed on track at Belgium and Monaco in 2014, there was ill temper after Hamilton took the title in Texas in 2015, and famously they took each other out of the race in Barcelona in 2016, the year Rosberg would go on to win his only title. The pair had been friends as youngsters in karting but the relationsh­ip came apart as they were vying for the title. These are strong characters that are hard to contain.

“Well there is ego but I really like ego because ego is a strong driver,” Wolff says. “But it needs to be channelled, it needs to be conditione­d. I believe the best performers have ego, they have edges but that makes them very strong.”

To that end he also sees a level of plain speaking and honesty as crucial, something he had to address from the moment he started at Mercedes, delivering some uncomforta­ble truths to the Mercedes-Benz board. Wolff, then executive director at Williams, had been asked to assess the team in the summer of 2012, specifical­ly as to why they had not been more successful since buying the marque from Brawn. What he discovered did not please the board.

“I told them: ‘I am at Williams running exactly the same budgets and my expectatio­n is top six and you have the same budget and your expectatio­n is world champions – that’s what is wrong,’” he said. “They were very angry but I said: ‘Don’t shoot the messenger ...’

“So when I came in I told Mercedes I need to have the same budget as our main competitor­s, Ferrari and Red Bull. I won’t guarantee that this will make us win the championsh­ip, but I can guarantee that if you don’t give it to us you will not win it. The board said: ‘Tell us what you need.’”

The expense may not have been in the original Mercedes plan, but the extraordin­ary success that followed doubtless more than made up for it.

Wolff had displayed the same critical honesty that he had applied to his own career. He was born in Vienna in 1972 but had no interest in motor racing until he was 18 when on a weekend away with friends he stopped at the Nürburgrin­g to watch an F3 race. “I remember walking on to the grid and standing next to those F3 cars and I was thunderstr­uck, realising this is what I wanted to do,” he says. He describes it as “the moment I found my identity” and was captivated by it. “I don’t remember watching the race but it was the drivers, in those cars on the grid, ready to go in their machines,” he says. “I wanted to do it immediatel­y, but I didn’t even know where to start.”

Typically Wolff just threw himself into it to find out. He gained sponsors, bought a Seat Ibiza, attended the Walter Lechner racing school and took to the track. He then moved to a Formula Ford 1600 but was unlucky at the opening race in Brno. After a spin he was T-boned by another car, the bones in his fingers were smashed and he was taken to a nearby hospital in the old Czechoslov­akia.

“I was in this ex-communist hospital,” he recalls. “The X-ray machine looked like an antique and they said to me: ‘Operazion’. So I call my mother who is an anaesthesi­ologist and I tell her I broke my hand, and she says: ‘You idiot. I told you it was a waste of money.’

“‘I told her they want to operate on me and she just says: ‘Get out of there!’ So I am there in my hospital dressing gown and I put on my trousers and ran outside. I jumped in my car and drove to Vienna, a two-hour drive with broken fingers, one-handed, flat out.”

He laughingly describes it as his “first Formula Ford racing adventure”. More would follow but ultimately Wolff ’s pragmatic side won out over his driving ambitions. He accepted he had started late in his life and decided to call it a day in 1994. “I felt rather than being on the back foot I am going to stop studying and stop racing. I am going to launch myself into business. I never looked back.”

There is one thing in his Mercedes career that has caused some retrospect­ion, however: the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in 2021 when errors by the then race director Michael Masi were instrument­al in deciding the race, won by Max Verstappen, and in so doing denied Hamilton his eighth title.

Wolff and Mercedes were incensed at the time but while it clearly still rankles he insists it must be considered in context. “It certainly wasn’t the hardest moment that I had in my life; there were a hundred that were harder than this,” he says. “I also understand that there are far worse tragedies happening in the world – look at Ukraine.”

The sense of injustice does nonetheles­s remain. “What happened was extreme unfairness in a sport that should be fair. All the competence, the hard work, the commitment of many people can still go in the bin within a few seconds because someone takes a bad decision.

“Life is full of surprises. I would never have imagined I would be here or the success of this team. I am 52 now. It sounds old but hopefully there are another 30 years of Mercedes F1 for me. It’s important that when you hand over the baton at 80, you can say: ‘That was pretty good. I am happy with myself – I met my own expectatio­ns of my life.’”

This is an edited extract fromF1 Racing Confidenti­al, Inside Stories from the World of Formula One, written by Giles Richards and published by Michael O’Mara Books on 29 February, £20

nal clawing his way back from 0-6 0-3 and saving three match points to oust American Alex Michelson 0-6 7-6 (7-1) 7-5.

Thompson looked in charge early against Ruud in the final, with his mixed bag of shots putting his rival on the back foot.

He had particular success at the net, using his deft touch to win 18 of 22 points, but the second-ranked Australian again made life difficult for himself in the second set.

He led 5-3 and then wobbled when serving for the match up 5-4, with former world No 2 Ruud levelling at 5-5.

Thompson was able to refocus amidst a noisy local crowd bidding for Ruud to push the match into a third set, and wrapped up the title in the tiebreak with a charging forehand winner.

“I spent so many hours on the court this week. In the quarter-final I could have been double bagelled, I could have been losing 6-0, 6-0 and now I’m about to lift the trophy, so I think it’s still a miracle,” Thompson said post-match.

“It’s been a journey. I’m nearly 30 and I’m lifting a trophy; I never thought I would do that.

“My favourite place now, without a doubt,” he said of Los Cabos.

Thompson’s previous tour-level finals came in the Netherland­s in ‘sHertogenb­osch, in 2019 and 2023.

He’d had a blazing start to the year, beating Rafael Nadal to reach the Brisbane semi-finals and reaching consecutiv­e quarter-finals in Dallas and Delray Beach prior to his Los Cabos run.

Ruud, 25, had taken down defending champion Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece in their semi-final and had his 11th tour title and a return to the top 10 in sight.

Thompson and Ruud then had to square off again a short time later in the Los Cabos doubles semi-finals, with Thompson teaming with fellow Australian Max Purcell and Ruud partnering William Blumberg.

This leaves Thompson with the opportunit­y to become the first player since Nick Kyrgios (2022 Washington) to collect the singles and doubles titles at the same ATP Tour event.

 ?? Coates/Getty Images ?? ‘I register no difference between any single employee and the drivers’: Toto Wolff with the Mercedes team after winning the constructo­rs championsh­ip in 2019 Photograph: Charles
Coates/Getty Images ‘I register no difference between any single employee and the drivers’: Toto Wolff with the Mercedes team after winning the constructo­rs championsh­ip in 2019 Photograph: Charles
 ?? M Bruty/Getty Images ?? Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg endured a difficult relationsh­ip which Wolff had to try to managed. Photograph: Simon
M Bruty/Getty Images Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg endured a difficult relationsh­ip which Wolff had to try to managed. Photograph: Simon

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