Lewis Hamilton’s telling admission as Mercedes face up to harsh F1 reality

Fast-forward two months and those words appear to have spectacularly backfired aꦫmid what has been a dreadful start to the season for Mercedes.&nbs♕p;
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Interestingly, Hamilton made a point of recalling that exchange on Saturday evening in Imola following a frustrating Emilia Romagna Granౠd Prix sprint race in which he could only finish 14th.
Sunday’s ma❀in grand prix would go on to be even worse, with the seven-time world champion enduring a miserable run to 13th while teammate George Russell finished fourth and nearly a minute up the road. Adding insult to injury, Hamilton was lapped by race winner and former F1 title rival Max Verstappen.
“In Barcelona testing the question was put to me: ‘What happens if you get it wrong?’ And I said: ‘We don’🏅t do that, we don’t get things wrong,🎃 we’re world champions,’” Hamilton said. “But the fact is, with all the possibilities out there, we may have.”
It marked the first proper acknowledgement from Hamilton that his once-dominant Mercedes team is having to now face up to a harsh new reality. It was also unprovoked, highlighting that it was clearly something he wanted to address and get offꦡ his chest.

Despite the new low Hamilton currently finds himself in, he remains determined to help Me🔯rcedes turn things around and has vehemently rejected the suggestioᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚn he could quit F1 after a dismal start to the year.
“What we’ll continue to do is just keep our heads down, keep working,” he added. “If one person is down, w🧸e rely on our team mates to lift each other up.
“We’re nowhere near where we want to be, but we’ll just keep fighting and keep working a൲s hard as we can and hope that eventually we see light in the tunnel.”
Mercedes’ innovative W13 challenger is yet to deliver the kind of performance the team had been expecting and has been hampered by severe porpoising - a high-frequency༺ bouncing phenomenon - that has left the Brackley-based outfit puzzled.
This was supposed to be the car that woꦅuld enable Hamil𝄹ton to fight for a record-breaking eighth world title and strike back from the disappointment of the controversial conclusion to the 2021 championship.

Instead, Hamilt🍃on finds himself only seventh in the championship and is already trailing Charles Leclerc by 58 points in what has been his worst start to an F1 season since 2009. As such, he has already written off his chances of competing for this year’s world title.
“I know there are a lot of points available, and theoretically, yes it’s still possible. But o💮ne has to be realistic and the problems we have are not small,” Hamilton conceded.
“These guys [Ferrari and Red Bull] are seconds, over a second ahead as a worst case scenario𒁃💞. We don’t currently have anything coming to fix it for the next race, we don’t have a solution just yet.
“Even to design something if we do find what the solution is and we have to change it, the team will work as hard as they can,🍒 but things could take months in design and getting those things built.
"So, I think we keep our heads down, we remain 💫hopeful, we continue to chase. But I have to k💃eep an eye on the realistic position we’re in. We’ve just got to work hard to make sure that we’re not in this position next year.”
Where do Mercedes go from here in F1 2022?
M✃ercedes is yet to bring a major upgrade 𝓡to its W13 car, which has spent the early part of 2022 almost a full second off the pace.
The German manufacturer is not rushing through developments, in part because F1’s new budget cap no longer allows teams to throw their endless financial might at i🍨mproving their cars, but also to ensure it maximises the time🉐frame to properly understand the issues it is facing.
While there is no immediate fix, Mercedes has been forced to raise the ride height of its cars in order to limit the bouncing, though in doing so it is haemorrhaging downfor𓄧ce and lap time.

"We very much believe that the signs we're putting in at the m✅oment will help us to in effect run the car lower, where we believe we have all the aerodynamic goodness,” Mercedes boss Toto Wolff explained.
“But we haven't been able to unlock it because of the bottoming out of the car. If we are able to finally get on top of that, that means there is ✃quite some lap time we can find. If not, we need to have another idea.”
Mercedes is aiming to bring new parts, inc🌄luding the expected arrival of a lower-drag rear wing, to the next race in Miami in a bid to ease the issues it is facing with its car.
It is hoped the updates will enable the team to run its cars lower and finally extract tღhe W13’s true potential. But trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin warned the team is "not expecting to solve this overnight".
"A lot of the work that is g꧒oing on in [the factory in] Brackley has been to understand the phenomenon and whether we can actually control it, whether we can engineer it out of the car,” Shovlin said.&🦹nbsp;
"Is there an aerodynamic solution that we can apply to the car that will make t꧃his problem go away?
"💎Now, being realistic we think this will be something we approach in steps rather than one big moment where the whole thing vanishes.
"But we are seeing encouraging signs. As I said, we are hoping to bring parts to the🌃 car soon, maybe even Miami where we can hopefully see pro🅠gress on this issue."


Lewis regularly atte൩nds Grands Prix for wuqian0821.com around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories of the people who matter in theꦜ sport.