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.

Recommended for you

Scott McLaughlin pushing to avenge last year’s ‘embarrassing’ Indy 500 pace lap crash

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Scott McLaughlin pushing to avenge last year’s ‘embarrassing’ Indy 500 pace lap crash

Driver arrested and banned after ramming car in the pits, knocking over crew members

General
Driver arrested and banned after ramming car in the pits, knocking over crew members

Louis Foster: Throwing a yellow doesn’t kill the race, NASCAR does it for fun

IndyCar
Louis Foster: Throwing a yellow doesn’t kill the race, NASCAR does it for fun

How victory in Portugal could have a bearing on Hyundai’s WRC future plans

Feature
WRC
Feature
Rally Portugal
How victory in Portugal could have a bearing on Hyundai’s WRC future plans

How Fabio Di Giannantonio struck a nerve with Pedro Acosta: 'Nobody passes me while looking at me' 

MotoGP
French GP
How Fabio Di Giannantonio struck a nerve with Pedro Acosta: 'Nobody passes me while looking at me' 

Can F1 save its races in Bahrain and Jeddah? Here’s how every option could play out

Formula 1
Can F1 save its races in Bahrain and Jeddah? Here’s how every option could play out

How winding back the clock helped Fabio Quartararo salvage a good home GP

MotoGP
French GP
How winding back the clock helped Fabio Quartararo salvage a good home GP

IndyCar, IndyCar Officiating announce changes following Rossi’s Indy road course incident

IndyCar
Indianapolis Road Course
IndyCar, IndyCar Officiating announce changes following Rossi’s Indy road course incident

Mercedes wary of 'unconscious favouritism' via split strategies

Mercedes will check to make sure it is not "unconsciously favouring" either of its Formula 1 drivers by allowing them to execute different strategies, like in the British Grand Prix.

Race winner Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 and Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes AMG F1 celebrate in Parc Ferme

Lewis Hamilton overcome teammate and poleman Valtteri Bottas to clinch a record-breaking sixth win at Silverstone, after opting for a one-stop strategy and a long second stint on hard tyres.

That, combined with a safety car before Hamilton had made his first stop, allowed him to leapfrog Bottas, who had pit early and stuck to a two-stop strategy.

Bottas thought a one-stop was “out of the question” and even Hamilton admitted he was not sure he would be able to stick it out on the hard tyres.

Team principal Toto Wolff said the strategic freedom was a result of driver-led discussion in the team’s morning meeting, but he said questioning the move away from the team’s tendency to run the same strategy was “a fair argument”.

Asked by Motorsport.com to explain the different strategies, Wolff said: “The discussion we had with them in the morning was, if you were to put them on the same tyre on the same strategy, basically Turn 1 or lap one would lock in the result.

“And we felt that, picking up on their suggestion, it would provide an interesting race. It still overlapped on many instances, we knew they would be racing each other but maybe with a different strategy, so that's what we tried.

“I think in hindsight in the argument has value, and I think we need to look at it – are we favouring somebody unconsciously? Which we wouldn't want to do.

“It created more experience and more data for us to judge whether it's something we want to do in the future.”

For PRIME users:

Unlike Ferrari and Red Bull with Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen respectively, Mercedes opted not to make a second pitstop for Bottas under the safety car.

That forced him to make a second stop later on to take a mandatory second compound, and Wolff explained there were two arguments against switching to the hard tyres when the race was neutralised.

“We were still not convinced that a one-stop would make it, so we were offsetting our strategies,” Wolff said.

“The other thing is I think he would've come out behind Sebastian [Vettel], because Sebastian was running close behind him, if I'm not mistaken.”

Vettel pit under the safety car as well but Wolff said Mercedes did not know that would happen.

“I think the call was right in not pitting him, but what must be said is that Valtteri drove a splendid race,” Wolff added. “He would've deserved also to be a winner. Both of them deserved to be winners today. Strategy and the safety car just went against him, it’s just bad luck.”

Previous article Red Bull grid drama was cracked rear wings
Next article Vettel: Important to own up to Verstappen crash "misjudgment"

Top Comments

Latest news