Wolff on angry radio messages of Hamilton and Rosberg: 'They were young'

08:00, 11 Aug 2024
5 Comments

Following the 2014 regulation change, Mercedes were able to jump the field completely. As a result, their two drivers, Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg became the two biggest contenders for the title in 2014, 2015, and 2016. Toto Wolff gave an insight on how he dealt with the high-tempered situations after Grands Prix when the two were fighting for the aforementioned championships.

Following the Hungarian Grand Prix, Max Verstappen was criticised for the way he talked to his race engineer, Gianpiero Lambiase during the race. Mercedes team principal and CEO, Toto Wolff, himself also had to deal with similar radio messages when he had the driver line-up of Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg.

The rivalry between Hamilton and Rosberg is one to remember in Formula One. Hamilton was victorious in 2014 an 2015, while the German got the better of Hamilton in 2016, after which season he decided to retire from the sport. According to Wolff, there were often some high-tempered conversations with the two champions, as a small margin was the difference between victory and second place. "If the car even stops under them in the meantime, it's natural that we are the competitor's trash cans, and they can take their frustrations out on us. However, there is a limit that must not be exceeded," he told Formula.hu.

Wolff continued: "I saved some unpleasant team radios, which I then played for them. 'This is shocking', is how they reacted to their own radio messages. I asked them if the team had ever told them when there was a driver error how bad a job they were doing. The expectations regarding how everyone communicates in the team are valid back and forth."

However, Wolff they sees that it is something the pair of drivers had to learn at the time. "It should be added that they were both too young, so it is somewhat understandable that they used us as trash cans."

5 Comments
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Ludizapoli 11 August 2024 at 13:42+ 7267

So Max still has two years to justify such behavior with: that he is too young.?

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Vegan Warrior 11 August 2024 at 11:37+ 4953

This is very insightful approach: " I saved some unpleasant team radios, which I then played for them. 'This is shocking', is how they reacted to their own radio messages. I asked them if the team had ever told them when there was a driver error how bad a job they were doing. The expectations regarding how everyone communicates in the team are valid back and forth."

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MabMav 11 August 2024 at 08:54+ 9040

Man,not like they were 7 or 8 year olds....same with the current drivers....these are adults,but similar to a 6 year old in the toy isle not getting his wish, throwing tantrums.


Now,some.kids learn at a very early wage that bad language and or behavior has got consequences, usually not pleasant and do not indulge in such behavior.....

But if a kid has not learned this lesson at a very young age...you are not going to change him at 20 years old...

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kingpeppermint 11 August 2024 at 12:00+ 4407

But it is also something we see more in topsport, I remember Zidane for example headbutting someone in his last duel for the French national team. (and yes i pull that up because i don't really care about football but that is something i remembered. Because of how it went.)

Retribution 11 August 2024 at 19:25+ 1347

Bad example to be honest. Nothing comparible to Rosberg and Hamilton.