Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Title-winning BTCC Peugeot and Harvey in an MG among Touring Car Rewind: North highlights

National
Title-winning BTCC Peugeot and Harvey in an MG among Touring Car Rewind: North highlights

MotoGP Barcelona test: Acosta fastest as rain curtails running early

MotoGP
Barcelona Official Testing
MotoGP Barcelona test: Acosta fastest as rain curtails running early

Why this year's Indy 500 isn't as straightforward to call as you might expect

Feature
IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Why this year's Indy 500 isn't as straightforward to call as you might expect

Will Mercedes or McLaren land the next punch at F1's Canadian GP?

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Will Mercedes or McLaren land the next punch at F1's Canadian GP?

The mental challenge Evans takes on at Rally Japan

WRC
Rally Japan
The mental challenge Evans takes on at Rally Japan

Why the Catalan GP chaos may finally force MotoGP riders to unite

Feature
MotoGP
Catalan GP
Why the Catalan GP chaos may finally force MotoGP riders to unite

Why Ford 'loves the V8 idea' in F1 amid changing road car strategy

Formula 1
Why Ford 'loves the V8 idea' in F1 amid changing road car strategy

What we learned from MotoGP's wretched Catalan GP

Feature
MotoGP
What we learned from MotoGP's wretched Catalan GP

Mercedes F1 team Wolff insists Hamilton Austria win was never on

Lewis Hamilton lost the Austrian Grand Prix with crucial errors in qualifying and Formula 1 title rival Nico Rosberg deserved to beat him, according to Mercedes boss Toto Wolff

Hamilton made mistakes on both of his flying laps in the final segment of Red Bull Ring qualifying, running wide at Turn 8 on the first run and having his time disallowed, before spinning under braking for Turn 2 on his final flyer.

The 2008 F1 world champion recovered to second in Sunday's race, behind Mercedes team-mate Rosberg, and team boss Wolff said that was the best Hamilton could have hoped for, despite finishing just under two seconds behind Rosberg.

"He lost the race in qualifying," said Wolff.

"He recovered tremendously with a great start and a great first lap, [but] in all our calculations the best possible result was second, and he achieved that.

"It has no relation to a cautious approach from the pitwall because both of them were running with an equal car.

"Clearly, Nico that afternoon was the faster guy. Why was he the faster guy? Because he was starting in P3 and not in P9, so Lewis's result was compromised by Saturday.

"He was chasing him [Rosberg], but if you push your brakes and your tyres harder they suffer more than the guy in the lead."

SLOW STOPS NOT TO BLAME

Wolff denied that Hamilton's superb opening lap, in which he rose from ninth on the grid to fourth, meant slower pitstops than Rosberg's were actually to blame for his being beaten by the championship leader.

"No, I think when you recover from ninth, chasing down your team-mate is where you probably have been more aggressive on your tyres, more aggressive on brakes - it's how you manage the race, and both of them are having a constant reassessment of how much to push the car at a particular stage in order to have the tyres and brakes when they need them to attack or defend," Wolff said, when asked by AUTOSPORT whether slow stops were to blame for Hamilton's defeat.

"Our pitstops were generally not on the level we want them to be, also because we were conservative and didn't want to ruin it with an unsafe release.

"Maybe that's a thing we need to look at, and get more aggressive again if the gaps to the other teams narrows down.

"But in Lewis's favour we pitted him early and before Nico, which is against what we normally do, in order to jump Valtteri [Bottas], so he had the benefit of the strategy although running second on the track."

Previous article McLaren F1 team encouraged by Austrian GP step forward
Next article F1 teams should not be involved in cost-cutting rules - Horner

Top Comments

Latest news