Zürcher Nachrichten - Wolff plays down Mercedes rivalry as 'good learning'

EUR -
AED 4.198921
AFN 73.1739
ALL 93.868994
AMD 418.70592
ANG 2.04704
AOA 1048.443129
ARS 1700.755974
AUD 1.64794
AWG 2.058013
AZN 1.941079
BAM 1.957204
BBD 2.30219
BDT 140.875062
BGN 1.933252
BHD 0.431311
BIF 3405.656369
BMD 1.14334
BND 1.478793
BOB 7.916298
BRL 5.886486
BSD 1.14309
BTN 108.988677
BWP 15.524411
BYN 3.266973
BYR 22409.471061
BZD 2.29916
CAD 1.619954
CDF 2586.235851
CHF 0.922624
CLF 0.027128
CLP 1067.697177
CNY 7.778431
CNH 7.771908
COP 3825.079475
CRC 520.01399
CUC 1.14334
CUP 30.29852
CVE 110.346588
CZK 24.254806
DJF 203.569625
DKK 7.475137
DOP 67.210582
DZD 152.257293
EGP 56.817769
ERN 17.150105
ETB 184.511689
FJD 2.557311
FKP 0.855746
GBP 0.853601
GEL 3.018235
GGP 0.855746
GHS 13.0606
GIP 0.855746
GMD 84.019271
GNF 10025.053227
GTQ 8.721266
GYD 239.125758
HKD 8.959272
HNL 30.601477
HRK 7.533928
HTG 149.590324
HUF 357.927275
IDR 20702.463903
ILS 3.459851
IMP 0.855746
INR 109.147215
IQD 1497.404147
IRR 1571807.159958
ISK 143.40978
JEP 0.855746
JMD 181.830466
JOD 0.810622
JPY 185.705345
KES 147.719368
KGS 99.982854
KHR 4615.372135
KMF 492.779373
KPW 1029.006724
KRW 1729.805384
KWD 0.354081
KYD 0.952688
KZT 534.425794
LAK 25791.505711
LBP 102369.75151
LKR 383.341465
LRD 207.481593
LSL 18.754824
LTL 3.375987
LVL 0.691595
LYD 7.313407
MAD 10.68957
MDL 20.079759
MGA 4888.507562
MKD 61.688974
MMK 2400.649188
MNT 4100.774574
MOP 9.227242
MRU 45.635742
MUR 53.886035
MVR 17.664068
MWK 1982.256968
MXN 20.074256
MYR 4.661286
MZN 73.062177
NAD 18.754824
NGN 1574.162363
NIO 42.0654
NOK 11.132076
NPR 174.361281
NZD 1.991733
OMR 0.439606
PAB 1.14312
PEN 3.888448
PGK 5.027607
PHP 70.42795
PKR 317.73315
PLN 4.308129
PYG 6953.98957
QAR 4.16739
RON 5.236129
RSD 117.341058
RUB 86.780628
RWF 1681.013498
SAR 4.289957
SBD 9.235985
SCR 15.578294
SDG 686.566272
SEK 11.064047
SGD 1.478356
SHP 0.853619
SLE 27.811711
SLL 23975.279874
SOS 653.194405
SRD 42.995889
STD 23664.837062
STN 24.514802
SVC 10.002396
SYP 126.375808
SZL 18.74832
THB 38.241347
TJS 10.568483
TMT 4.001691
TND 3.378924
TOP 2.75289
TRY 53.591124
TTD 7.756684
TWD 36.824365
TZS 3001.253546
UAH 50.885011
UGX 4212.543576
USD 1.14334
UYU 45.963985
UZS 13729.151027
VES 783.285502
VND 30064.134773
VUV 136.918925
WST 3.173323
XAF 656.436613
XAG 0.019334
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.089935
XCG 2.060287
XDR 0.816314
XOF 656.442359
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.057445
ZAR 18.720701
ZMK 10291.435846
ZMW 20.605785
ZWL 368.15513
  • CMSC

    -0.0032

    22.0169

    -0.01%

  • JRI

    0.0050

    13.005

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.6900

    71.98

    +0.96%

  • BP

    -0.5150

    38.695

    -1.33%

  • NGG

    -0.9300

    82.6

    -1.13%

  • GSK

    -0.1150

    52.405

    -0.22%

  • BCE

    -0.0950

    21.355

    -0.44%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4600

    67.86

    -0.68%

  • RYCEF

    0.2400

    19.25

    +1.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0250

    13.065

    -0.19%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    89.24

    +0.49%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    22.35

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.2000

    31.85

    -0.63%

  • AZN

    -12.2700

    177.01

    -6.93%

  • BTI

    -0.1800

    61.21

    -0.29%

Wolff plays down Mercedes rivalry as 'good learning'
Wolff plays down Mercedes rivalry as 'good learning' / Photo: Cristobal Herrera Ulashkevich - POOL/AFP

Wolff plays down Mercedes rivalry as 'good learning'

Mercedes team chief Toto Wolff recalled his role in managing previous intra-team title battles after calming the strife between championship leading Italian teenager Kimi Antonelli and George Russell ahead of Sunday’s Canadian Grand Prix.

Text size:

The pair had clashed during Saturday's sprint race, won by pre-season title favourite Russell, in an incident that prompted an angry Antonelli to claim he had been "pushed off" and that his team-mate should be penalised.

But after cool-down talks to establish the rules of racing engagement, Wolff was confident his Silver Arrows drivers would avoid crashing into each other during Sunday’s showdown at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.

"We’ve obviously been through all this before, all these motions, with Nico (Rosberg) and Lewis (Hamilton), back in 2015 and '16," said Wolff.

"But this was good racing, like sport should be with an inter-team battle, and for us it’s a good learning experience.

"And it was very easy, too, because we sat them down and said ‘how do we want to race? Are we racing the other car like any third car, which I’m fine with, and then obviously, you don’t leave any space there.

"Or do you want to leave the space -- which I would not expect, because fundamentally, you are racing for winning and winning the championship.

"Or are we playing this super-smooth sailing and you only overtake each other on the straight under braking?

"So, we agreed that we trust them and that they know how to push, but in any case, no one is expecting the other one to leave space, because it’s too important."

Wolff’s guidelines, in effect, left the two early-season title protagonists with the freedom to race hard and aggressively, but without making contact – a scenario that promises a tense and thrilling start to Sunday’s race.

- 'Hard done by' -

Russell starts from his third consecutive Canada pole position chasing his second successive win in Montreal to trim Antonelli’s 18-point lead in the title race – while the precocious 19-year-old Italian is seeking a fourth straight win to pull further clear.

Russell understood the emotional reaction from Antonelli when he defended his position on lap six and forced him to take evasive action by running off the track at Turn One.

"If I was in his position and he was in my position, I probably would have reacted the same way," he admitted.

"If something doesn’t pay off in the moment, you feel hard done by and blame the other guy. It’s just natural.

"We’re all racers. We are all fighters and we wear our hearts on our sleeves.

"It’s a tough position where everything we think, or feel, is broadcast to the world. We don’t regret it, but we may wish we said something differently."

A more subdued Antonelli said: “We had a discussion and clarified things and now it’s all good. We reviewed it, had a chat with Toto and that’s it.”

While the Mercedes pair settled their differences, for now, four-time champion Max Verstappen headed into the race after confirming his threat to quit this year if F1 does not follow through on changing the engine regulations next season.

"It it stays like this, for me, it is going to be a long year next year, which I don’t want and it is mentally not doable. It’s really not. There’s a lot of other fun things to do out there."

In common with many other drivers, the Red Bull driver wants to switch from a 50-50 split between engine power and battery power to a 60-40 split.

L.Rossi--NZN