F1: Mercedes boss admits Ferrari win was 'a wakeup call'

F1: Mercedes boss admits Ferrari win was 'a wakeup call'

Published Mar. 30, 2015 2:18 p.m. ET

Toto Wolff admits he was surprised at how Ferrari caught up with Mercedes in Malaysia, and says that the team must now ramp up development in response to the threat from Maranello.

That could include fast tracking new parts as well as using up power unit tokens sooner rather than later to improve the performance of the next batch of engines.

“We didn't expect it to happen at that pace,” he said of Ferrari's improvement. “We were pretty confident in Melbourne, and we're always a little bit skeptical about our own advantage. And we always believed that we have to keep sharp and keep developing in order not to be caught out. Within two weeks you're actually caught up by a Ferrari and you lose the race fair and square on track is a bit of a surprise, but equally a bit of a wakeup call, which is good for us.

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“If I want to be optimistic I would say that Malaysia was a difficult one last year and the temperatures and were pretty exceptional and we suffered from those temperatures, but then that would be a bit naive.

“I think they've done a great job, they have a good car, good engine and great drivers, and we just have to analyze in the next couple of days what went wrong, where we need to improve, do we need to take some developments forward, put them on the car quicker, what are we doing about engine number two, and assess that properly. But definitely we need to increase the pace of our development.”

Wolff said he had no regrets about strategy decision the team took in Malaysia.

“It is always easy to regret and say in hindsight that we could have done this better or that better, but we are taking these decisions altogether, and we haven't done any strategic mistakes in the last two years that I can recall, and thus is why it doesn't make sense to point the finger to a single event. We need to find out why we were struggling on long run pace in these hot conditions. I think that is the main point to look at.

“We've had completely different conditions here. When you remember last year we were struggling against Ricciardo in the race, and I guess one of the explanations of the day is the extremely high ambient and tarmac temperatures, and that probably we've gone a bit too aggressive on setups. That pushed us into a direction of a three stop, which was pretty clear, all the algorithms showed that. And then we were struck in traffic after the pit stops, we damaged the tires following cars, and here you're not able to catch it up any more.

“Today, strategy is not gut feelings any more or gut decisions, it is algorithms and it is lots of scientific research, and you add that little bit of racing spirit. We have the best guy in the paddock in terms of strategy, and today we relied on information we had over the weekend. And what we've seen with the Ferrari is better than what we expected. On our own pace probably we were just about right, and this is why we were confident throughout the race that we would catch them in the end. But it just wasn't enough.”

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