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May 30, 2017

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Concerns mount at Mercedes after Monaco tumble

IT used to be a case of guessing the winning margin for Mercedes in the constructors’ championship, and a toss-up between which of its two drivers would win the Formula One title.

Not any more.

Sunday’s Monaco Grand Prix clearly underlined how Mercedes is not the force it was, with Lewis Hamilton, who has won two of his three world titles with Mercedes, finishing seventh and new recruit Valtteri Bottas taking fourth place.

Up ahead, Ferrari clinched a clinical 1-2 finish with Sebastian Vettel beating teammate Kimi Raikkonen and opening up a 25-point gap over Hamilton at the top.

After six of 20 races, this lead is not big enough to be alarming. But the inconsistency of the Mercedes car certainly is.

“We will be pushing to fully understand it,” Hamilton said. “Because we can’t be in this position again.”

The next race is the Canadian GP in two weeks’ time, and all eyes will be on Mercedes in practice and qualifying. That Hamilton even managed to take seventh place was a credit to his remarkable driving ability, seeing as he started from 13th place on the grid after a calamitous qualifying session in Monaco.

“Of course, I can’t afford another weekend like this, at the going rate with the Ferraris quick,” Hamilton said. “We’ve got a real fight on our hands. We’ll be sure to push those red cars hard next time out in Canada.”

But the team is struggling to find answers. Head of motorsport Toto Wolff even called the Mercedes car “a diva” and a “mystery” because of its temperamental and unpredictable nature.

There is even talk that Mercedes may have to give priority to one of its two drivers to arrest the current slide. At the moment, both are officially on an equal footing and free to compete fully against each other — as Hamilton and Nico Rosberg were over the last three years.

Last year, Mercedes finished nearly 300 points ahead of Red Bull in the constructors’ championship, winning 19 of 21 races as Rosberg pipped Hamilton to the title before dramatically announcing his retirement from F1. Ferrari was an afterthought, 367 points adrift of Mercedes in third and scrapping for podium places rather than wins.

With new regulations designed to make cars wider, heavier and faster this year, Ferrari seems to have worked wonders in the factory while Mercedes appears to be going backward.

“We are the underdogs,” Wolff said. “This is the new reality.”




 

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