Wolff warns ‘karma exists’ as Merc chase success the ‘right way’

Date published:July 24 2022-Michelle Foster

Toto Wolff focused in front of the computer. Imola April 2022

Conceding in yesteryear his approach had been one of “win at all costs”, Toto Wolff says these days it is important to him for Mercedes to “win the right way”.

For seven seasons Mercedes dominated Formula 1, crushing their rivals as they raced to seven successive championship doubles.

It was an unprecedented run, but one that ended last season with Red Bull taking the Drivers’ title with a last-lap-of-the-season pass by Max Verstappen on Lewis Hamilton in Abu Dhabi.

Little did Mercedes know Hamilton’s win at the previous race, in Saudi Arabia, would be the team’s last as of now.

Mercedes have not won a single grand prix in the new era of ground-effect aerodynamic cars, a design concept that is creating a fair amount of controversy amidproposed rule changes to eradicate porpoisingandsuspicions that some teams are running flexi-floors.

Wolff has insisted several times Mercedes have only lobbied for the rule changes on the grounds of the health and safety of their drivers, the team known to suffer the most with porpoising and not looking to gain a competitive advantage.

The motorsport boss has also expressed his shock at the flexi-floor suspicions, implying it is not a grey area Mercedes chose to exploit.

After all, these days he wants to win the right way.

Lewis Hamilton hugs Toto Wolff. Silverstone 2021

“I don’t know if it gives us an edge over the other constructors because we are all different in our approach,” the Austrian toldsquaremile.com.

“The sport is, after all, an entertainment product and the ‘win at all costs’ mentality is something I would have endorsed a couple of years ago.

“That’s very much the American way of just crush the opposition whatever it takes.

“Today, I still want to win but I want to win in the right way.

“I have values and a mindset I want to stand for in the team. I believe in humility, honesty, integrity and transparency. These are ingredients that are important in the long term.”

The team boss hopes in the decades to come he can look back at his time atMercedesand say he did it the right way.

“You may have someone that wins but doesn’t win in the right way, but that will not last,” he continued. “And… karma exists.

“I’m not looking at one race or one season, I’m looking at 10 or 20 years. My perspective is long term because I’m a co-owner of the team.

“My time will not end with my employment contract, so that allows me to look beyond my ‘shelf life’ of the next decade.

“I want to be able to look back and say ‘we did it the right way and we were successful’.”