Lewis Hamilton won his third drivers’ world title in virtually untouchable fashion, but in a year of pressures and problems, both he and his Mercedes team ended the season looking anxiously at their rivals.
The 30-year-old Briton, who lost his focus and his dominant speed in the closing three races to teammate Nico Rosberg, won the championship with a month to spare.
His complete supremacy for most of the season left him ecstatic, and then vulnerable, when a period of intense celebrations saw Rosberg take over as F1’s winner as the champion lost his way and, at times, his composure.
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Their in-team competitive relationship was the focus of much attention and merited a warning from Mercedes racing chief Toto Wolff, who said that if they “crossed the line” in their sometime squabbles, it could result in dismissals.
Clearly concerned that the tensions in their rivalry would become acrimonious and spill over into the team and cause a level of demotivation, Wolff later said he felt certain that both men understood their responsibilities.
“Nico and Lewis know very well what was meant,” Wolff said. “The spirit of the team is essential. It is one of the forces which makes us who we are and what we are... If there would be animosity within the team, that would be detrimental to the team.
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“And I said that if we were unable to contain the fierce competition and it could spill over to the team, then we would be needing to look at how we would set up the driver line-up for the future,” he said.
The melodrama of their relationship was the dramatic highlight of a routine season, with Hamilton driving flawlessly to leave no doubt of his status and speed long before he eased off and Rosberg revived himself to reel off three season-ending victories.
“I actually look at the last three races as a blessing in disguise,” Hamilton said. “If I’d have won the last three races, that would’ve been quite a lot of races won in the season and perhaps I would have gone into next season with less of a buzz, but actually, now, I have great determination.”
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Both men agreed that their in-team rivalry was essential for them to maintain their own form and edge and, at the same time, drive Mercedes forward as the much-improved Ferrari team, boosted by their arrival of four-time champion Sebastian Vettel, showed signs of closing the gap.
“I hope that Toto always comes back to the conclusion that it’s actually good the way it is,” Rosberg said. “I can see a couple of extra gray hairs that have arrived. Maybe those are courtesy of us.”
Vettel’s impact with Ferrari proved that Mercedes have every reason to be concerned as he reeled off three wins and 13 podium finishes to suggest the Italian squad can make next year much less comfortable for Hamilton — assuming he can rediscover his mojo — and Mercedes.
Under new management, the scarlet scuderia improved throughout the year and, if early speculation can be believed, might try to recruit the year’s outstanding newcomer Dutch teenager Max Verstappen of Toro Rosso to partner Vettel in 2017.
Kimi Raikkonen, who endured a topsy-turvy year, kept his seat for another season, but knows that the 18-year-old new boy has a talent way beyond his years.
He proved it with a series of stirring drives that contributed to him winning three awards at the International Motoring Federation (FIA) prizegiving gala this month — for personality of the year, rookie of the year and action of the year, which was for his passing move around the outside of Felipe Nasr of Sauber at the high-speed Blanchimont corner during the Belgian Grand Prix.
“It’s nice to win that because I really enjoy overtaking,” said the big-grinning Dutchman, his arrival in F1 having given the sport a lift it needed as talk of buyouts, walkouts and financial problems swirled around throughout the year.
It was no surprise, after months of court appearances and persistent trouble with unpaid bills, when Lotus confirmed their takeover by Renault for next year.
It was more unexpected that Red Bull chose to continue with Renault as their engine supplier, albeit with them badged by Tag-Heuer, given the way in their relationship had collapsed as the former champions blamed the French company for their loss of power and success.
However, the biggest shock belonged to McLaren, whose reunion with Honda, as engine suppliers, produced a year of failures and frustration that two-time champion Fernando Alonso and 2009 champion Jenson Button endured with wry humor.
They needed it.
Passed easily by almost every other team, the once-proud champion team McLaren were unrecognizable as a serious force.
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