As another race is ticked off the 2021 calendar there is one question that is becoming all but impossible to ignore – has Mercedes finally met their match?
There’s only been eight races in what is slated to be a 23-race calendar but there is no denying that Max Verstappen and Red Bull are in serious form. After securing a first pole position on home soil Verstappen all but cruised to a fourth consecutive win for Red Bull in Austria. Lewis Hamilton was second for Mercedes but had no answer to Verstappen’s pace. Aside from a late race pit stop to snatch an extra point for fastest lap Hamilton was trailing by roughly 15 seconds. It was a big statement too. So far the margin, in terms of pace, has been razor thin between Red Bull and Mercedes and but for a few mistakes Hamilton could well have won in Baku and France. But here in Austria the superior pace run by Verstappen was well beyond anything Mercedes could muster.
Valtteri Bottas was handed a rather harsh 3-place grid penalty after spinning in the pitlane during practice. Nevertheless, the Finn was able to hold off a late charge from Sergio Perez to finish third. A slow pit stop dropped Perez behind Bottas but the Mexican driver, who finished fourth, continued to show impressive pace in the Red Bull, which will undoubtedly please those in charge. Aside from the championship protagonist the driver who has surely been the most impressive in 2021 is Lando Norris. The McLaren driver racked up another fifth place finish after delivering a stunning performance on Saturday too. Though he may be slightly out of the spotlight in comparison to Verstappen and Hamilton Lando Norris is turning into something quite special.
Carlos Sainz drove a brilliant race for Ferrari into sixth while teammate Charles Leclerc recovered from a first lap clash to finish seventh and be voted driver-of-the-day. Lance Stroll was eighth for Aston Martin ahead of Alpine’s Fernando Alonso in ninth. Japanese rookie Yuki Tsunoda was tenth while his Alpha Tauri teammate, Pierre Gasly, retired on lap one with suspension damage. Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Raikkonen drove brilliantly to eleventh place after starting eighteenth. George Russell ran as high as eighth place before being painfully forced into retirement with a hydraulic leak. Despite being in the deeply uncompetitive Haas Mick Schumacher once again easily outdrove his teammate to finish sixteenth.
Mercedes has been challenged before but not this relentlessly. Ferrari mounted a serious attack in the first half of 2018 but then faded after the summer break. Before Mercedes even had to think about having to come up with an answer or a plan. But in 2021 it doesn’t seem like Red Bull are likely to fade. And what is most surprising is that Mercedes and Hamilton seem completely stumped. There’s no doubt that they were shell-shocked by Red Bull’s pace in France. But what is more telling about their current inability to respond is their demeanour. The way that Hamilton has spoken post-race tells a story by itself. Instead of motivating talk of fighting until the bitter end or pushing for every last tenth of a second Hamilton seems almost resigned. By saying that Red Bull is simply faster and there’s nothing he [Hamilton] can do about it is what you’d expect from a 7-time champion.
Mercedes have clearly been pushed well out of their comfort zone and they don’t seem able to provide anything to counter the Red Bull onslaught. It isn’t complacency brought on by their complete domination of the hybrid era. But perhaps they are slightly guilty of resting of their laurels and relying on what has happened before to carry them through 2021. But it doesn’t seem, at this stage, like that will be enough. They may be relying on Hamilton’s experience of winning 7 titles but Verstappen’s run is gaining a near unstoppable momentum.
Mercedes have another chance this weekend to do better around the Red Bull Ring and the season is far from over. In 2016 Nico Rosberg proved that Hamilton’s greatest weakness is his mentality. If that begins to crumble he becomes ever more susceptible. And judging by his comments it appears that he is not in a good mental space. The question is now what is Hamilton, who many have dubbed the greatest of all time, really made of when the pressure is on?