Mercedes: Miami promise shows W13 can fight at front of F1 in 2022
The German car manufacturer brought a range of updates to the Miami event, including a revised front wing endplate and low downforce rear wing package.
Those tweaks helped George Russell top second practice on Friday as the team enjoyed its most competitive day of the campaign so far.
But despite Mercedes’ setup choices for Saturday meaning it slipped down the order, with Lewis Hamilton ending up sixth on the grid, team boss Toto Wolff expressed some optimism about its progress.
And having stood firm so far in its belief that the W13 concept would perform when the team got on top of the bouncing, he remained steadfast that Miami proved the team is right to keep its faith in it.
Asked at what point Mercedes would abandon the idea and switch focus to next year, Wolff said: “We believe that our concept has the potential for us to race at the front. But it is also a sensitive concept.
“Once it’s in the window it can function very well but it’s very difficult to get it in that window, because of the floor, obviously, being much more exposed than the other cars.
“We are still believing in that direction, that it’s right, and we’ll have another set of data [in the race] and in Barcelona which will be good for correlation work from the test with our launch car.
“Then comes the moment where we have to decide what we will do for next year. But it doesn’t work to say you are writing off one season to concentrate on the next, because it’s the same regulations.
“I just think our understanding grows every day, we’ve already said this is another experimental weekend. Yesterday [Friday] was good, today [Saturday] not.”
George Russell, Mercedes W13
Photo by: Carl Bingham / Motorsport Images
The team’s form this year has been limited by