Formula 1: Mercedes Has Been Given A Reality Check, Says Russell After 7th Place In Bahrain
With British drivers Lewis Hamilton and George Russell in the cockpit of a new car, Mercedes was expected to give champions Red Bull and Max Verstappen a run for their money in the Formula 1 season opener in Bahrain Grand Prix.
With British drivers Lewis Hamilton and George Russell in the cockpit of a new car, Mercedes was expected to give champions Red Bull and Max Verstappen a run for their money in the Formula 1 season opener in Bahrain Grand Prix.
The hopes were bolstered with Mercedes doing well in the qualifying rounds, while in the end Red Bull took the top two positions on the podium with Verstappen and Sergio Perez, Hamilton finished fifth and Russell took the seventh spot.
Thus, Russell insists Mercedes must go "back to the drawing board" after he finished in seventh position in the season opener in Bahrain -- with the British driver questioning whether the team have been "too conservative" with their 2023 car, the W14.
Russell lined up in sixth position (P6) on the grid but lost a place to teammate Hamilton -- who finished fifth on Sunday -- at the start, although he was able to overtake the Aston Martin of Fernando Alonso on the entry to Turn five, putting him back up to sixth.
However, Alonso made his way past Russell on Lap 13, as the Mercedes driver's soft tyres began to degrade, before he also lost out to the other Aston Martin of Lance Stroll at the pit exit after the second round of pit stops, leaving him down in eighth.
Speaking after taking the chequered flag in seventh -- having gained a position thanks to Charles Leclerc's retirement -- Russell said: "I think after yesterday we thought we had a chance of fighting the Ferraris and the Aston Martins and that wasn't the case.
"The fact is we didn't have enough performance on the car, I think yesterday exceeded our expectations, today's probably back to reality and we just need to get back to the drawing board and keep on working."
"When you have a fast race car everything becomes easier, the strategy is better, the tyre management is better, race starts are a bit better because you have more grip and downforce. And today everything just wasn't where we needed it to be, so yeah, work to do," he was quoted as saying in a report on the formula1.com website.
With the Saudi Arabian GP under two weeks away, Russell was asked where he and his team go from here, to which he responded: "I'm not too sure to be honest. It's definitely too early to say you know, [but] we've learned a lot in these two weeks.
"Perhaps we've been a little bit too conservative with the design and we're missing a little bit too much performance downforce-wise. With all these changes we've made to try and improve the porpoising... we probably seem to be the team that [now] has the least amount of bouncing."
He concluded: "We've gone from the team that has the most to the team that has the least. And perhaps with the changes the FIA made over the winter, that solved a lot of the problems and we've gone maybe one step too far.
"Perhaps we've been a little bit too conservative with the design and we're missing a little bit too much performance downforce-wise. With all these changes we've made to try and improve the porpoising... we probably seem to be the team that [now] has the least amount of bouncing."
Also Read: Cricket Tales