Mercedes engineers insist they ‘need a faster car’ to compete with Red Bull and Max…


Mercedes engineers insist they ‘need a faster car’ to compete with Red Bull and Max Verstappen this Formula One season despite Lewis Hamilton winning the Bahrain Grand Prix

  • Formula One champions Mercedes say their car is not stronger than Red Bull 
  • Lewis Hamilton won the season opener in Bahrain just ahead of Max Verstappen 
  • Mercedes trackside engineering head Andrew Shovlin insists work will be done 

Formula One champions Mercedes say their car is not stronger than Red Bull in any one area despite Lewis Hamilton winning Sunday’s season-opening race in Bahrain.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was fastest in every practice session in Bahrain and took pole position before finishing second as Mercedes made the most of clever strategy and Hamilton’s skill.

Mercedes trackside engineering head Andrew Shovlin said the team were already deep in discussion about what they needed to do better.

Formula One champions Mercedes say their car is not stronger than Red Bull this season

Lewis Hamilton narrowly beat Max Verstappen in the season opening Bahrain Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton narrowly beat Max Verstappen in the season opening Bahrain Grand Prix

‘We don’t really have any strengths relative to them, is what I would say,’ he added when asked which areas the car needed to improve in.

‘We’ve had a lot of years where we’ve been able to rely on straight-line speed or high-speed cornering or interconnected corners but you look at it here and we weren’t taking any time out of them anywhere.

‘In qualifying we’re just bang on their pace in our best corners and they are quicker in the others. So we need a faster car, simple as that.’

Restrictions this year make it harder to add performance, with little time allowed in the wind tunnel and a ban on developing the engine.

Mercedes trackside engineering head Andrew Shovlin said the team have work to do

Mercedes trackside engineering head Andrew Shovlin said the team have work to do

There are also major rule changes coming next year, with teams set to shift resources to their 2022 cars sooner rather than later.

‘We’re having to look at more subtle areas to do with driveability characteristics,’ said Shovlin. ‘This season is actually going to come down to the fine margins more than normal.

‘I don’t see us really being able to develop to a point where we could get clear ahead and hopefully Red Bull won’t develop to a point where they’re clear ahead.’

Aerodynamic tweaks have also affected those teams such as Mercedes with a low-rake car more than Red Bull’s high-rake philosophy.

Shovlin said there was nothing to be done about that.

‘What we certainly can’t do is suddenly say we’re going to lift the rear of our car 30mm and work with that because that would write off the season… we’d lose so much in doing that… it’s just not practical.’

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