F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Russell: Mercedes ‘won’t fall into same traps’ it did in 2023

George Russell says he’s confident Mercedes has done its due diligence on its 2024 challenger and “won’t fall into the same traps” it did in 2023 when it rushed the design of its W14 car.

Mercedes' surprising decision to retain for 2023 its "zero-sidepod" design and overall car concept from the 2022 W13 was partly fueled by Russell's victory at the 2022 São Paulo Grand Prix.

However, the W14's struggles were evident from the start of last year’s campaign, prompting a swift change in direction.

This was done at the Monaco Grand Prix where the Brackley squad rolled out a heavily revised W14 that adopted the trendy downwash sidepod concept initiated by Red Bull.

While progress ensued, Mercedes concluded the season second in the championship behind Red Bull but without a race win to its name.

Read also:

As Mercedes seeks to take the fight to the bulls this season, team boss Toto Wolff suggested that his outfit has taken a more holistic approach to the design of its 2024 contender.

At F1’s season finale in Abu Dhabi, Wolff gave a heads up on his team’s efforts to turn around its fortunes.

“So we are changing the concept, we are completely moving away from how we laid out the chassis, the weight distribution, the airflow, I mean literally there is almost every component that has been changed because only by doing that do we have a chance,” he revealed at the time.

“We could get it wrong also, so between not gaining what we expect to catching up, making a big step and competing at the front, everything is possible.”

But Russell explained why he is confident that Mercedes can deliver the goods.

“Mercedes has been working on the new [W15] concept for a long time and there’s been so much due diligence gone into that concept,” he said.

“Whereas I think last year it was all a little bit rushed.

“We didn’t have all the information to hand, we may have jumped to a couple of conclusions without thoroughly going through the consequences.

“And we learned when the car hit the ground this year that we made a step forward in some regards, but it came with a lot of baggage and we hadn’t taken that into consideration.

“So, I think we’ve done a great job to truly understand what we need.”

©Mercedes

Catching Red Bull – let alone overhauling the reigning world champions – is a tall order, not only for Mercedes but for all its F1 rivals.

But Russell’s confidence in the W15 reflects the team's return to thorough analysis and methodical development.

“We’ve obviously had a further 12 months’ experience to further understand the car and what brings the performance.

“I think last year we put all our eggs in one basket and that wasn’t a basket that provided the performance we were expecting.

“[But], the fact is we’ve got to close a huge gap.

“The Red Bull dominance this year is probably the greatest - I think statistically it is the most dominant car ever, so we’ve all got a huge task on our hands.

“But I’m going into next year with an open mind.

“I don’t think anyone’s expecting either us, McLaren, Aston Martin or Ferrari to make that step straightaway.

“But [I’m] definitely confident we won’t fall into some of the same traps we did this [last] year.”

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Sainz samples new Madring: ‘You’ve created quite a cocktail’

The Spanish Grand Prix’s future home is still surrounded by construction barriers, deadlines and heavy…

1 hour ago

Ten years on: Marko reveals Horner resisted Verstappen promotion

Helmut Marko has revealed that Max Verstappen’s in-season promotion from Toro Rosso to Red Bull…

3 hours ago

Schumacher and Irvine paint the town red in Monaco

On this day in 1999 in Monaco, a dominant Michael Schumacher secured his 35th career…

5 hours ago

Rosenqvist finds 233 mph magic at Indy on Fast Friday

Sometimes at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, speed doesn’t build gradually – it arrives like it…

5 hours ago

McLaren powers up: Intel returns to F1 after 20-year hiatus

Nearly two decades after its last high-speed venture in Formula 1, American computing giant Intel…

7 hours ago

Verstappen admits to 'super tough' Nürburgring 24 Hours qualifying

Max Verstappen’s Nürburgring 24 Hours debut is already delivering the kind of storyline only he…

8 hours ago