00
00
00
00
Sorry
Something's gone wrong
Sorry
Something’s gone wrong.
News
Two-time Grand Prix winner Patrick Tambay passes away, aged 73
News
Verstappen pinpoints breakthrough race that got title charge back on track after ’pretty terrible’ start to 2022
News
Sainz says he learned more in ‘challenging’ 2022 than in any year since his rookie season
News
‘We owe a lot to Ross’ – Team bosses pay tribute to Brawn as he steps back from F1 role
News
‘He’s sometimes too nice’ – Williams tech chief urges Albon to ‘push team harder’
Discover more news
George Russell chose to focus on the positive moments when reviewing his first season as a Mercedes F1 driver, reminding fans that success is “all relative” after the team failed to win a title for the first time since 2013.
While Mercedes fell behind Red Bull and Ferrari in the pecking order under F1’s new technical regulations, the initially troubled W13 still yielded a step up the grid for Russell, who spent three years with Williams before his promotion to the Silver Arrows.
Over the course of the year, and as Mercedes worked through their problems, Russell racked up seven podium finishes with his new team, before leading home team mate Lewis Hamilton for a breakthrough maiden victory at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix.
READ MORE: ‘Next year, we’re back’ declares Wolff, as Mercedes aim to recover from ‘character-building’ season
Asked how tough his first season at Mercedes had been, Russell gave a philosophical response.
“I mean, it’s all relative at the end of the day," he said. "This season has still been the best season of my career. [We’ve had a lot of] podiums and I think we’ve had a lot of very good races.
“I think you’ve got to take the positives from… I’m not going to call this a difficult situation, but from a performance side we’re not where we want to be. But you can’t just sit there, sulk and be upset with everything.”
Russell went on to highlight Mercedes’ impressive reliability record throughout the year, with Hamilton’s retirement from the Abu Dhabi finale their one and only mechanical DNF – as the team now look to combine that strength with more performance next season.
“As a team we’ve done a really great job. They’ve done a really great job with reliability, from the [power unit] side, from the car side. There’s a lot of positives to take away from this season. Obviously the one we’re missing, the main one, was just a little bit more lap time,” added Russell.
READ MORE: Wolff says Mick Schumacher ‘close to our heart’ as he opens up on possibility of Mercedes reserve role
Russell ended the season fourth in the drivers’ standings, 35 points ahead of Hamilton, becoming only the third driver – after Jenson Button and Nico Rosberg – to out-score the seven-time world champion as a team mate in F1, while Mercedes placed third in the constructors’ battle.
News
Ferrari say Mercedes’s late-season speed was ‘not a surprise’ and feel they should have won a race before Brazil
News
Jeddah Corniche Circuit announce track changes ahead of 2023 Saudi Arabian GP
News
‘My worst year in what was a crucial year’ – Latifi explains 2022 struggles that led to Williams exit
Technical
TECH TUESDAY: The most improved, most innovative, best-developed, and most dominant F1 cars of 2022
News
‘We owe a lot to Ross’ – Team bosses pay tribute to Brawn as he steps back from F1 role
Download the Official F1 App
© 2003-2022 Formula One World Championship Limited