It's business as usual for Mercedes and Lewis Hamilton at the moment, but emotions will no doubt kick in as the Briton’s move to Ferrari next season edges closer to becoming a reality, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff told reporters in Las Vegas.
Ferrari team boss Fred Vasseur did not ask for the seven-time Formula 1 champion Hamilton’s early release, and Wolff said the sport’s most successful driver will get a proper send-off after 11 years behind the wheel for Mercedes.
Speaking after the first practice for Saturday’s Las Vegas Grand Prix, Wolff said: “There is no overwhelming emotion now that this is ending... (but) the last race together will be quite a thing because we had this wonderful partnership for such a long time.
“But having said that, Lewis is not going to disappear. Lewis is going to be on the grid next year with a Ferrari. We are not losing the person; we are just losing the driver. But we embark on a new future,” ventured Wolff.
Hamilton, 39, has struggled this season. He said he had felt like walking away from Mercedes early after finishing 10th in São Paulo earlier this month, saying it had been “a disaster of a weekend” and the worst the car had ever been.
Wolff also raised eyebrows when he was quoted as saying in a recently published book that “everyone has a shelf life,” adding that the Ferrari move meant he would not have to make the decision to get rid of Hamilton.
Wolff: One rule that we’ve established very early in our relationship...
On Thursday, Wolff reiterated to reporters that the quotes were taken out of context and said the pair have moved past it: “Lewis and I speak, and we’ve always done so, and a sentence that correlates or a sentence that then happens is being made public on the weekend.
“Particularly where he hasn’t been satisfied about his driving and about the car, then one plus one then makes it look bad. But one rule that we’ve established very early in our relationship is that we talk immediately and say, ‘Why did you say that?’ or ‘What did you mean?’ and that is what we have done.
“You know, that was one sentence in a book, and there were 99 sentences around the Brazil weekend and quotes in some interviews that I’ve given about Lewis where I clearly remark that he’s the greatest driver of all time.
“If we are able to give him a quick car, he’s going to be able to win, he’s able to fight for a championship, but we have failed in doing so,” admitted Wolff, whose Mercedes team did, however, provide Hamilton with cars that gave him six of the seven F1 world titles he has to his name.
Hamilton was
fastest in both practices in Las Vegas on Thursday and will look to keep it rolling in Friday's final practice and qualifying.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll; Additional Reporting by Agnes Carlier for GP247)