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    Mercedes boss wants Lewis Hamilton to LOSE F1 World Championship to rival Max Verstappen as ‘it’s time for someone else’

    MERCEDES DTM boss Hubert Haupt wants Max Verstappen to win the F1 World Championship over Lewis Hamilton.Verstappen, 24, leads the Brit by 12 points with just five races to go.
    12 points separates the two title rivalsCredit: GETTY IMAGES
    Should Verstappen become champion, it’ll be Red Bulls’ first since 2013, and it would end Mercedes’ seven-year domination.
    And Haupt thinks ‘it’s time’ for someone other than Hamilton to be top of the F1 mountain.
    Haupt competes in the DTM (Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters) championship with three Mercedes cars for HRT, the team he owns.
    He told Sport1: “I think it’s time for someone other than (Lewis) Hamilton to become world champion.
    “In terms of Formula 1, it would be huge for Red Bull to win the title, so I hope Verstappen manages it.
    “There are still a few more circuits that suit Mercedes, but if Max scores well in the next two races, he will have the nerve to hang onto it.”

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    Mexico, Brazil, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi will be the battlegrounds where the title is decided.
    Hamilton won the last time F1 was in Mexico City back in 2019, but Verstappen has a knack for winning on the track too.
    Verstappen won in back-to-back seasons before Hamilton’s win.
    And the Dutchman also won in Brazil in 2019.
    Verstappen is ‘very relaxed’ as the title race nears a close.
    He told the New York Times: “Sometimes people take F1 too seriously, like it’s a life-or-death situation.

    “[Drivers think] ‘if I don’t make it to F1, my life is over,’ or something like that. For me, that was never the case and never will be. 
    “I’m very happy that I am in F1 now, but even if I wasn’t, I would still do something else – racing-related stuff to have fun, to have a good time.”
    The dream is always to win the championship, but you need to have a bit of luck.Mex Verstappen
    He continued: “I know that if my car is fast enough until the end of the season, I will win the championship.
    “But if it’s not, then we probably won’t win it. At the end of the day, it’s not going to change my world.
    “Of course the goal, the dream is always to win the championship, but you need to have a bit of luck, you need to have the right car for it to be at the right time of the season or across the whole season.
    “It’s a dream from when I was a little kid together with my dad [former F1 driver Jos], to get to F1 in the first place and then trying to fight for a title.
    “For sure, it would mean a lot if we can win it.”

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    Lewis Hamilton stuns group of kids by ditching disguise and giving inspirational speech More

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    ‘I wouldn’t be able to hold wheel’ – Hamilton’s ex-team-mate Rosberg reveals why he couldn’t drive two laps in F1 car

    NICO ROSBERG was ready to make a shock return to the track last season as cover for Lewis Hamilton.But the former world champ has revealed the physical demands of driving an F1 car made it impossible for him to try.
    Nico Rosberg retired from F1 in 2016Credit: Getty Images – Getty
    Rosberg wanted to reverse his 2016 retirement and stand in for Hamilton after the Brit tested positive for Covid-19 ahead of last year’s Sakhir Grand Prix.
    The forces put through the body behind the wheel of an F1 car require extreme fitness to handle – something the German felt was beyond him after so long out of the sport.
    Rosberg told Jenson Button on his YouTube channel: “I would definitely have considered picking up the phone there.
    “But I physically would not have been able to. No way.
    “I would not manage more than two laps with that car. My arms would solidify rock solid, my fingers… I wouldn’t be able to hold the steering wheel anymore after two laps, I am sure.
    “Not to speak of the neck falling between my legs when I’m braking, because I wouldn’t be able to hold my head up!

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    “The G-forces on those things, the challenge and the development you need on all your specific muscles, your arm muscles…
    “It’s very on the edge. So physically, no chance.”
    Drivers regularly experience as much as 5G in braking or cornering during a race – making their bodies five times ‘heavier’ than they would normally be.
    They need incredibly strong legs, core and neck muscles to withstand such extreme forces.
    Drivers even find it impossible to breathe under such pressure as they battle to keep their eyes on the road.
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    Inside Mercedes’ multi-million pound engine room as SunSport exclusively meets drivers, engineers and SPIES of F1 champs

    WELCOME to mission control – and that mission is to retain the F1 world title.SunSport was granted special access to Mercedes’ top-secret Race Support Room – the nerve centre at the heart of the team’s success.
    SunSport was granted special access to Mercedes’ top secret Race Support Room at BrackleyCredit: Daimler AG
    Teams of people work tirelessly to ensure Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas can perform at their bestCredit: Daimler AG
    Deep inside Merc’s Brackley HQ, SunSport had the chance to witness vital conversations between drivers, engineers and spiesCredit: Daimler AG
    Deep inside Merc’s multi-million pound high-tech Brackley HQ, I got to witness the vital conversations between drivers, engineers – and spies – during qualifying some 4,900 miles away in Austin for the US GP.
    So what is the RSR?
    Think of it like mission control at NASA, with a giant screen and up to 30 key managers assessing every piece of data transmitted from the cars driven by Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas.
    There is even an army of spies, who decipher secret coded messages from Mercedes’ rivals.
    Around 10 students have the job of monitoring the airways, eavesdropping on radio communications and watching video footage to see what the other teams and drivers are up to.
    They then pass on the transcripts from teams’ radios and photos to senior Merc bosses to assess and inform the pitlane to help with their strategic decisions.

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    In return, Merc allows the volunteers open access to their communications as they gain crucial race experience.
    Merc boss Toto Wolff calls the RSR the team’s ‘remote brain’ and adds: “Whilst we are racing, everybody in the RSR keeps the machine moving.
    “When we’re sleeping, they are learning so we have a car and an engine that goes faster than anyone else.”
    But the rules for my visit were very clear – no photos and no repeating of sensitive conversations!
    The level of secrecy is understandable, Mercedes are seven-times consecutive winners of drivers and constructors’ titles and want it to remain that way.
    A giant screen dominates the room with 14 other screens dotted around.
    Shots of Hamilton’s and Bottas’ garage, the weather radar, lap times, a giant overlay of track and relevant GPS locations of all 20 cars are all on view.
    The RSR is connected to the pitwall, so the engineers at Brackley can exchange information.
    But that’s before we even talk about the huge amount of data coming from the car back to the war room.
    Mercedes are coy on the amount of sensors on their car but the figure is in the hundreds.
    Every piece of information is analysed and scrutinised and no less than FIVE strategists set about picking the best race strategy.
    The key is being prepared so when a curveball does come up, there is always a contingency and the predicted eventuality.
    Such is the importance of the RSR, strategic decisions made in the UK result in wins.
    On the spying missions, Dominique Riefstahl, who runs the Race Support Room, revealed: “It’s extra manpower, because listening to 20 car feeds’ worth of people talking, you just need ears to monitor all of the TV feeds, you need eyes on the ground.”
    Senior Race Strategy Engineer Joseph McMillan added “The students are doing things like listening to all the radio comms and transcribing, so we can see all the text, and clipping videos.
    “They volunteer at the weekends because it’s cool.”
    The Race Support Room is jam-packed with monitors as staff and volunteers keep on top of thingsCredit: Daimler AG
    The information gathered in the RSR helps Mercedes chiefs concoct their race-winning strategiesCredit: Daimler AG
    The information gathered helps Merc boffins compile their race-winning strategies.
    McMillan added: “The Spanish GP this year is a great example of when a decision has been made here, rather than at the track and resulted in a win.
    “We changed from a one-stop to a two-stop for Lewis. I’d done the maths, said: ‘Here’s the plan, we should do this.’
    “Chief strategist James Vowels looked at it and went: ‘Yep, you’re right.’ He did it and Lewis won.”
    Perhaps one of the biggest surprises about spending time in the RSR is the amount of feedback Hamilton gives his team over the radio.
    He is constantly asking questions about his rivals, tyre temperatures, suggesting set-up changes.
    For all those who think he jumps in the car and drives, I can assure you that is simply not the case.
    The level of information he provides to the team on his laps is incredible and shows just why Hamilton relies on the RSR as much as the guys in his garage.
    Hamilton said: “The RSR is so important for the team and how we function through the weekend.
    “When we do our big comms meetings, the RSR team are on the other line listening in and we are just one big team.
    “The guys in the RSR back at the factory are doing a huge amount of simulation, preparation, finding answers, downloading information and understanding that information so we can make the right choices on a weekend.
    “They are a super-important extension to what we do at the track as we have limited numbers and are integral to us achieving our goal which is winning races.”
    I learn that Hamilton has to be careful with just how much he says over the radio.
    When he’s out of the garage, his audio is fair game and available to his rivals.

    🏁 F1 2021 calendar: practice times, dates and racetrack info
    That all changes when he’s back in the garage and each time is reminded to ‘plug in’ his radio to keep it off the airwaves.
    But that is also another area where Merc excels, with a network of transcribers typing up what other drivers say while the digital boffins are able to monitor what’s going on elsewhere, grabbing still images from real-time footage.
    Dominique Riefstahl, who runs the RSR, says his role is keeping an eye on their cars, as well as their opponents.
    He says: “I’m the first point of contact if there are any questions coming from the track, and making sure we get the right people involved for analysing, answering, finding the image that they’re looking for.
    “As a simple example, at the start, the first thing we do is we already have the onboards of our cars but also the cars around us ready, and we’re watching them live.
    “If something is to happen to us, it would be reviewed and we could see if there is contact or not.
    “Then it might also be, did Max Verstappen go beyond track limits at a certain corner, or did we go beyond track limits?”
    Outside of the RSR, there are yet more details of how much work goes on behind the scenes and away from the racetrack.
    Riefstahl added: “We have support from systems, who are the guys running all the automation on the cars and there are guys running in the F1 simulator.”
    The sheer scale of the operation is staggering and as I leave just after midnight, around 60 minutes after qualifying in Austin, the work is only just beginning in Brackley.
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    Sam Bird says Formula E is still a massive turn-on as he eyes glory with Jaguar after BMW, Audi and Mercedes pulled plug

    SAM BIRD says Formula E is still a massive turn-on – despite BMW, Audi and Mercedes all pulling the plug on the series.The German trio are all quitting the all-electric series, with Mercedes deferring their withdrawal until the end of next season.
    Sam Bird says Formula E is still a big hit despite a team exodus
    But Bird, 34, who has been in FE since the first season, says the sport is going from strength to strength as they now approach their eighth campaign, kicking off in January.
    He said: “It is sad initially when you hear that big teams are leaving. Nobody wants that but it is part and parcel of world championship level motorsport.
    “You get people coming in and then you have people going. That’s the cycle.
    “You cannot expect to keep people happy in a competitive series, especially four massive German manufacturers.
    “It was always a question of when someone would depart but Formula E are already speaking to people to fill those voids.
    “It is still a healthy championship and I don’t see there is a major issue at all.”

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    While F1 is enjoying a boost in popularity, thanks largely to the Netflix Drive to Survive series, FE has its own fly-on-the-wall documentary out soon too.
    And Bird, a former test driver for the Mercedes F1 team, says comparisons should not be made between the two series.
    He added: “I don’t focus much attention or time on what other series are doing. What F1 does does not concern us, they are on their own path.
    “F1 has been going for decades and has built up the history of the teams, cars and drivers.
    “We are just going into season eight and what we have done in that short time is fantastic.
    “We are starting to get a history and fanbase of those drivers. People have now won over 10 races, which is a big step.
    “So it takes time to create these hero characters and F1 has such a history it is easier for that series.”
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    Meanwhile, as Bird approaches his eighth season in FE, he is now hoping that having the technical power of Jaguar behind him, he is able to win his maiden world title.
    He said: “I think the car Jaguar have given myself and Mitch Evans to races gives us the best chance of delivering Jaguar’s first world title in a long time, absolutely.
    “And my first driver’s title. There is no reason to think it will not be the case.”
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    Mercedes boss wants Lewis Hamilton to LOSE F1 World Championship to Max Verstappen as ‘it is time for someone else’

    MERCEDES DTM boss Hubert Haupt wants Max Verstappen to win the F1 World Championship over Lewis Hamilton.Verstappen, 24, leads the Brit by 12 points with just five races to go.
    12 points separates the two title rivalsCredit: GETTY IMAGES
    Should Verstappen become champion, it’ll be Red Bulls’ first since 2013, and it would end Mercedes’ seven-year domination.
    And Haupt thinks ‘it’s time’ for someone other than Hamilton to be top of the F1 mountain.
    Haupt competes in the DTM (Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters) championship with three Mercedes cars for HRT, the team he owns.
    He told Sport1: “I think it’s time for someone other than (Lewis) Hamilton to become world champion.
    “In terms of Formula 1, it would be huge for Red Bull to win the title, so I hope Verstappen manages it.
    “There are still a few more circuits that suit Mercedes, but if Max scores well in the next two races, he will have the nerve to hang onto it.”

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    Mexico, Brazil, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi will be the battlegrounds where the title is decided.
    Hamilton won the last time F1 was in Mexico City back in 2019, but Verstappen has a knack for winning on the track too.
    Verstappen won in back-to-back seasons before Hamilton’s win.
    And the Dutchman also won in Brazil in 2019.
    Verstappen is ‘very relaxed’ as the title race nears a close.
    He told the New York Times: “Sometimes people take F1 too seriously, like it’s a life-or-death situation.
    “[Drivers think] ‘if I don’t make it to F1, my life is over,’ or something like that. For me, that was never the case and never will be. 
    “I’m very happy that I am in F1 now, but even if I wasn’t, I would still do something else – racing-related stuff to have fun, to have a good time.”
    The dream is always to win the championship, but you need to have a bit of luck.Mex Verstappen
    He continued: “I know that if my car is fast enough until the end of the season, I will win the championship.
    “But if it’s not, then we probably won’t win it. At the end of the day, it’s not going to change my world.
    “Of course the goal, the dream is always to win the championship, but you need to have a bit of luck, you need to have the right car for it to be at the right time of the season or across the whole season.
    “It’s a dream from when I was a little kid together with my dad [former F1 driver Jos], to get to F1 in the first place and then trying to fight for a title.
    “For sure, it would mean a lot if we can win it.”

    🏁 F1 2021 calendar: practice times, dates and racetrack info
    Lewis Hamilton stuns group of kids by ditching disguise and giving inspirational speech More

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    Former Ferrari and Williams engineer Antonia Terzi killed in horror car crash aged 50 as F1 teams pay tribute

    FORMER Ferrari and Williams technician Antonia Terzi has been killed in a horror UK car crash, aged 50.The ex-aerodynamicist – who was born in Italy – was famous for creating the ‘Walrus nose’ in the 2004 season.
    Former Ferrari and Williams technician Antonia Terzi has tragically died in a car crash aged 50Credit: Williams Racing
    Her career began in F1 with Ferrari where she worked until 2001 – with Michael Schumacher among others -before moving to Williams.
    She played a key role in their race-winning push following an engine partnership with BMW.
    Terzi caused a stir at the start of the 2004 campaign when the Williams FW26 was unveiled with the new nose concept.
    She then moved away from motorsport to become the head of aerodynamics at luxury car manufacturer Bentley.
    The Italian moved into being a teacher in later years at universities in the UK and Netherlands.
    Last year, Terzi was appointed professor at the Australian National University in Canberra.

    She was planning to move there from Great Britain once the Covid-19 travel restrictions had eased.
    After the sad news emerged, Williams tweeted: “We are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of our former colleague and chief aerodynamicist, Antonia Terzi.
    “Our thoughts go out to Antonia’s friends and family at this difficult time.”
    Twitter user Ivan wrote: “During my PhD at Imperial College, I used to pass quite frequently by a 50 per cent model scale made in aluminium of Williams’ walrus nosebox, sitting next to one of our wind tunnels.
    “I always wondered who came up with that idea. It is rather sad to learn it this way. RIP Antonia Terzi.”

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    Mercedes boss wants Lewis Hamilton to LOSE F1 World Championship to Max Verstappen as ‘it’s time for someone else’

    MERCEDES DTM boss Hubert Haupt wants Max Verstappen to win the F1 World Championship over Lewis Hamilton.Verstappen, 24, leads the Brit by 12 points with just five races to go.
    12 points separates the two title rivalsCredit: GETTY IMAGES
    Should Verstappen become champion, it’ll be Red Bulls’ first since 2013, and it would end Mercedes’ seven-year domination.
    And Haupt thinks ‘it’s time’ for someone other than Hamilton to be top of the F1 mountain.
    Haupt competes in the DTM (Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters) championship with three Mercedes cars for HRT, the team he owns.
    He told Sport1: “I think it’s time for someone other than (Lewis) Hamilton to become world champion.
    “In terms of Formula 1, it would be huge for Red Bull to win the title, so I hope Verstappen manages it.
    “There are still a few more circuits that suit Mercedes, but if Max scores well in the next two races, he will have the nerve to hang onto it.”

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    Mexico, Brazil, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi will be the battlegrounds where the title is decided.
    Hamilton won the last time F1 was in Mexico City back in 2019, but Verstappen has a knack for winning on the track too.
    Verstappen won in back-to-back seasons before Hamilton’s win.
    And the Dutchman also won in Brazil in 2019.
    Verstappen is ‘very relaxed’ as the title race nears a close.
    He told the New York Times: “Sometimes people take F1 too seriously, like it’s a life-or-death situation.
    “[Drivers think] ‘if I don’t make it to F1, my life is over,’ or something like that. For me, that was never the case and never will be. 
    “I’m very happy that I am in F1 now, but even if I wasn’t, I would still do something else – racing-related stuff to have fun, to have a good time.”
    The dream is always to win the championship, but you need to have a bit of luck.Mex Verstappen
    He continued: “I know that if my car is fast enough until the end of the season, I will win the championship.
    “But if it’s not, then we probably won’t win it. At the end of the day, it’s not going to change my world.
    “Of course the goal, the dream is always to win the championship, but you need to have a bit of luck, you need to have the right car for it to be at the right time of the season or across the whole season.
    “It’s a dream from when I was a little kid together with my dad [former F1 driver Jos], to get to F1 in the first place and then trying to fight for a title.
    “For sure, it would mean a lot if we can win it.”

    🏁 F1 2021 calendar: practice times, dates and racetrack info
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    ‘Behave like actors’ – Lewis Hamilton’s Mercedes boss Wolff slams Red Bull rival Horner as F1 title race hots up

    TOTO WOLFF has taken a pop at Red Bull boss Christian Horner by accusing him of “behaving like an actor”.The Mercedes boss and Horner are frequently at loggerheads and exchange comments in public.
    Toto Wolff thinks his Red Bull rival Christian Horner is ‘a protagonist in the pantomime’Credit: PA
    Christian Horner thinks Mercedes boss Toto Wolff is under ‘a different type of pressure’Credit: Rex
    Horner recently suggested the Austrian was coming under a “different type of pressure” as Mercedes and Lewis Hamilton battle Red Bull and their driver, Max Verstappen, for the title.
    But Wolff says the behaviour of his opposite number, particularly on the popular F1 show, ‘Drive to Survive’, has him marked down as a “protagonist in a pantomime”.
    “What Christian says about me feeling pressure — no, not at all,” Wolff told the Daily Mail.
    “I feel he is one of the protagonists in a pantomime, part of the Formula One cast, and for me as a stakeholder, as a team owner, it’s great that he creates these kinds of stories.
    “But it’s irrelevant. People have a microphone in front of them or a camera on them and they start to behave like little actors, like Hollywood.
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    “It’s very good that they fill in the blanks and make it pantomime. That’s good for the sport and good for Netflix because they want to portray the people, not just the stopwatch.
    “People have realised they are being quoted if they say controversial things. It gives them media time, it gets their picture in the newspapers.
    “In many ways, we are going back to our roots because what Bernie Ecclestone created back in the day was racing and soap.
    “And when there was not enough racing he made soap, he was always good for a headline. So we’re back there.
    “But I don’t get drawn into it. I find it amusing, but it doesn’t touch me.
    “Look, I’ve had so many hard years in my life that this — fighting for a Formula One championship — is not on the scale.”

    🏁 F1 2021 calendar: practice times, dates and racetrack info
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