Understanding the true scale of Mercedes' F1 turnaround task
Mercedes has been considered the best of the rest behind Ferrari and Red Bull in the early stages of the 2022 Formula 1 campaign, but delving into the supertimes third place could be considered lenient – with worse to follow unless it solves its ongoing problems.
The porpoising Mercedes W13 has proved no match for the rapid Ferrari and Red Bull creations at the start of this ground-effect sequel for Formula 1. But the perception has been the team is a safe third, comfortably ahead of the shining lights of the midfield. There’s also an assumption that it’s only a matter of time before the three-pointed star unlocks the car and bounces back into contention for race wins. However, after three rounds in 2022, those causes for optimism must come with major health warnings.
At no point has Mercedes looked on the cusp of snatching a pole or victory so far this term. For an outfit that won eight constructors’ titles on the bounce, and for seven of those years also sewed up the drivers’ crown as a sign of its turbo-hybrid imperiousness, this is the leanest start to a season since 2011. That reinforces why Mercedes wanted to check expectations during testing, despite many supposing the Silver Arrows squad was merely bluffing.
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