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🏁 Formula 1 Season 2022: The Ups and Downs of Mercedes‑AMG PETRONAS​

Part I: The Zero‑Pod Gamble and the Shock of Irrelevance​


Opening Context – The Season Mercedes Never Prepared to Survive​

Mercedes entered the 2022 Formula One season believing two things:

  1. They had out‑engineered the field for eight straight years
  2. They could do it again under radically new regulations
They were wrong on both counts.

2022 was not a gradual decline.
It was a rupture — the most abrupt competitive collapse by a championship‑winning team in modern F1 history.

For the first time since 2011, Mercedes would go an entire season without a race win. But the scoreboard alone does not capture the scale of the shock.

2022 forced Mercedes to confront the possibility that they no longer understood Formula One at its most fundamental level.


Organisational Foundations in 2022​

Leadership Continuity, Conceptual Blindness​

Mercedes entered the new ground‑effect era with their championship leadership intact:

  • Toto Wolff – Team Principal & CEO
  • Mike Elliott – Technical Director
  • James Allison – Chief Technical Officer (strategic, not track‑facing)
  • Andrew Shovlin – Trackside Engineering Director
  • Hywel Thomas – Managing Director, Power Unit (HPP)
From the outside, this looked like a strength.

Inside Brackley, it became a liability.

The same group that had mastered the turbo‑hybrid era was now attempting to reinterpret an aerodynamic philosophy closer to the late 1970s than anything they’d dominated before.


The Drivers – Champions Without a Weapon​

Lewis Hamilton – Experience Meets Powerlessness​

For Lewis Hamilton, 2022 was the most unfamiliar season of his career.

He entered as:

  • reigning eight‑time champion in all but record,
  • vocal leader after the 2021 Abu Dhabi outcome,
  • still at the peak of his racecraft.
What he encountered instead was a car that:

  • fought him at every braking zone,
  • punished confidence,
  • and physically hurt him through violent oscillation.
This was the first year Hamilton could not impose himself through adaptation alone.


George Russell – The Statistical Outlier​

Russell would finish ahead of Hamilton in the points in 2022.

This is often cited — and often misunderstood.

Russell’s rookie‑at‑Mercedes season was defined by:

  • earlier trust in the unstable W13,
  • willingness to accept higher mechanical risk,
  • and occasional opportunism when chaos struck.
He did not outperform Hamilton on pace.
He simply suffered less penalty for compromise.


The Car – Mercedes W13 E Performance​

The Zero‑Sidepod Concept​

The W13 launched with one of the most radical aerodynamic concepts in F1 history: the now‑infamous “zero sidepod” design.

Key beliefs behind the concept:

  • ultra‑clean airflow toward the rear floor
  • maximum ground‑effect efficiency
  • vertical side panel exposure replaced by undercut philosophy
On paper, it was elegant.

On track, it was catastrophic.

The concept exposed the car to:

  • extreme porpoising
  • ride‑height sensitivity beyond control
  • a vicious feedback loop between oscillation and downforce loss
Mercedes had designed a car that could only work at one theoretical ride height — one the real world would never allow.


Bahrain – When the Truth Arrived Immediately​

Bahrain Grand Prix – Bahrain International Circuit​

The season opener in Bahrain should have offered teething problems.

Instead, it offered confirmation of conceptual failure.

Red Bull and Ferrari disappeared into the distance. Mercedes were fighting for fifth — behind cars using the same power unit they supplied.

Key observations:

  • violent porpoising on the straights
  • inconsistent braking zones
  • energy deployment compromised by oscillation
Hamilton finished out of podium contention. Russell salvaged what he could.

Mercedes were not unlucky.
They were structurally behind.


Jeddah – Pain, Literally and Figuratively​

Saudi Arabian Grand Prix – Jeddah Corniche Circuit​

Jeddah exposed the W13 to one of the fastest, most merciless circuits on the calendar.

By lap distance alone, it was punishing.

By physical toll, it was brutal.

Hamilton openly struggled just to remain competitive, while Russell again adapted earlier to the instability.

The porpoising reached levels that caused:

  • physical discomfort
  • blurred vision
  • delayed braking confidence
This was no longer purely a performance issue.
It was becoming a safety and health crisis.


Melbourne – The Illusion of Recovery​

Australian Grand Prix – Albert Park​

After FIA ride‑height clamps and setup compromises, Mercedes finally achieved a stable(ish) weekend.

Russell finished on the podium.

The result was misleading.

The W13 was not fast — it was no longer uncontrollable. Ferrari and Red Bull still owned the pace. The podium came through attrition and chaos, not direct competition.

Internally, this was the first dangerous moment of 2022.

Because stability was mistaken for progress.


The Porpoising War​

The Unavoidable Reality​

By mid‑spring 2022, it was clear:

  • Mercedes could not fully eliminate porpoising without destroying downforce
  • Raising the car solved bouncing but killed pace
  • Lowering the car restored pace but endangered drivers
This created the central paradox of the W13:

The faster you went, the worse it became.
No champion team in modern F1 had faced this level of architectural contradiction.


Patterns Formed by Early Season​

After the first third of the calendar, Mercedes faced facts they would resist for two more years:

Strengths

  • power‑unit reliability
  • race execution discipline
  • driver professionalism
Failures

  • flawed aerodynamic concept
  • narrow operating window
  • fundamental misunderstanding of ground‑effect interaction
There would be no silver bullet update in 2022.


Closing of Part I – The Year Mercedes Realised They Were Mortal​

Mercedes did not lose 2022 by inches.

They lost it at the design table.

The W13 was not unlucky.
It was not mis‑set.

It was wrong.

And yet — the team was not ready to abandon it.

That hesitation would shape 2023, poison 2024, and only fully release Mercedes in 2025–2026.


▶️ Coming in​

  • The mid‑season struggle
  • Why Mercedes refused to abandon zero‑pods
  • Russell vs Hamilton narrative myths
  • How “being third best” became acceptable
 

🏁 Formula 1 Season 2022: The Ups and Downs of Mercedes‑AMG PETRONAS​

Part II: Porpoising, Denial, and the Season Mercedes Tried to Understand Instead of Fix​


The Mid‑Season Reality – When Setup Became Triage​

By the time Formula One reached Europe in 2022, Mercedes were no longer chasing performance.

They were chasing functionality.

The W13’s behaviour forced every race weekend into a binary choice:

  • lower the car and risk violent porpoising, or
  • raise the car and accept a catastrophic loss of downforce
This dilemma was not theoretical. It dictated:

  • ride‑height corridors,
  • braking confidence,
  • energy deployment stability,
  • and driver physical endurance.
Mercedes were no longer tuning a race car. They were managing a system under stress. [f1briefing.com]


Why Mercedes Refused to Abandon the Zero‑Sidepod Concept​

The Internal Belief Structure​

Despite mounting evidence, Mercedes did not abandon the zero‑sidepod concept in 2022.

This was not stubbornness for its own sake. It was belief in:

  • computational consistency,
  • wind‑tunnel correlation,
  • and the idea that the concept’s theoretical ceiling was still higher than conventional solutions.
Mike Elliott would later explain that alternative bodywork concepts examined over the winter did not present a clear performance gain relative to the zero‑pod architecture — hence the decision to persist. [silverarrows.net]

The failure, then, was not wilful ignorance, but over‑confidence in virtual tools.


Why This Was a Critical Error​

The zero‑sidepod approach relied on:

  • extremely precise airflow management,
  • perfect wake control from the front tyres,
  • and consistent floor suction.
But under the 2022 regulations:

  • outwash devices were heavily restricted,
  • tyre wake control was weakened,
  • and floor sensitivity to ride‑height variation was far higher than simulation models predicted.
Other teams accepted this early.

Mercedes did not. [racingnews365.com]


The FIA Intervention – When Politics Met Physics​

Ride‑Height Directives​

Mid‑season, the FIA introduced additional ride‑height metrics aimed at:

  • limiting vertical oscillation,
  • improving driver safety,
  • and reducing porpoising severity.
For Mercedes, this brought physical relief — but worsened competitive disadvantage.

Raising the W13 further removed what little ground‑effect load remained. The car became safer, calmer, and slower.

Once again, the solution deepened the core problem.


The Russell vs Hamilton Narrative — Why It Missed the Point​

Statistics Without Context​

George Russell finished ahead of Lewis Hamilton in the 2022 Drivers’ Championship.

This fact is correct — and deeply misleading.

Russell’s advantage came from:

  • fewer DNFs (notably after incidents in Spain and Belgium affecting Hamilton),
  • earlier comfort accepting instability,
  • and strategic luck in races where Mercedes capitalised on attrition.
Hamilton, meanwhile:

  • sacrificed setup comfort testing limits,
  • accepted experimental configurations,
  • and focused relentlessly on long‑run race extraction.
Andrew Shovlin would later stress that the car’s unpredictability penalised drivers differently, depending on how quickly they were willing to trust instability — not on inherent pace advantage. [planetf1.com]


A Car That Punished Confidence​

One of the least discussed aspects of the W13 was confidence decay.

Drivers could not build rhythm because:

  • braking points shifted lap to lap,
  • oscillation varied with fuel load,
  • and aerodynamic load collapsed suddenly as ride height changed.
This environment favoured containment, not attack.

Russell adapted to that faster.Hamilton paid a higher price for chasing performance.


Development Without Escape​

Why No Update “Solved” 2022​

Mercedes introduced multiple updates in 2022:

  • floor modifications,
  • suspension tweaks,
  • edge sealing attempts,
  • stiffness adjustments.
None resolved the fundamental issue.

According to later analysis, the sidepods themselves were not the single biggest flaw — but they were a visible symptom of an architecture that could not manage tyre wake and floor interaction simultaneously. [planetf1.com]

Everything else was downstream compromise.


What Mercedes Actually Achieved in 2022​

By mid‑season, Mercedes had accomplished three things:

  1. Eliminated the worst porpoising effects
  2. Restored physical safety to drivers
  3. Re‑established operational discipline
They did not recover performance parity.

This distinction matters. 2022 was not a comeback story. It was damage limitation with learning.


Why Being Third Became Acceptable​

With Red Bull dominating and Ferrari self‑destructing, Mercedes gradually settled into a familiar but uncomfortable position:

  • clear third‑best team,
  • occasionally second when Ferrari faltered,
  • never close enough to win on pure pace.
This acceptance created psychological stability — but also lowered urgency.

Instead of tearing up the concept, Mercedes began asking:

“How far can we push this before the next regulation reset?”
That question would shape 2023 — for better and worse.


Closing of Part II – The Moment Mercedes Chose Understanding Over Abandonment​

Mercedes 2022 was not lost in September.

It was lost the moment the team decided:

  • to learn the zero‑pod concept,
  • instead of leaving it.
This choice produced knowledge — but at the cost of time.

Time that rivals used to converge.Time that pushed Mercedes’ full reset into 2024.Time that made 2025 a holding year.Time that made 2026 inevitable.


▶️ Coming in​

  • Why Mercedes never won in 2022
  • Brazil: the one weekend that almost broke the narrative
  • Abu Dhabi and the emotional hangover
  • How 2022 quietly poisoned 2024 while enabling 2026
 

🏁 Formula 1 Season 2022: The Ups and Downs of Mercedes‑AMG PETRONAS​

Part III: No Wins, One Warning Shot, and the Year That Rewired Mercedes Forever​


The Late‑Season Phase – When Understanding Replaced Ambition​

By the final third of the 2022 calendar, Mercedes were no longer fighting anyone.

Red Bull were gone.Ferrari were imploding.The midfield was operationally irrelevant.

Mercedes’ season objective had quietly shifted to:

  • ending porpoising violence,
  • protecting driver health,
  • preserving organisational coherence,
  • extracting knowledge that could be reused.
This was not a title contender behaving badly.

It was a dynasty learning how to survive irrelevance without fracturing.


Why Mercedes Never Won in 2022​

This point must be stated cleanly.

Mercedes did not go winless in 2022 because:

  • Lewis Hamilton declined,
  • George Russell was inexperienced,
  • strategy failed,
  • or reliability collapsed.
They went winless because the W13 could never access peak performance safely.

Every time Mercedes neared competitive ride height:

  • porpoising returned,
  • braking stability vanished,
  • downforce collapsed unpredictably.
Raising the car solved violence but killed competitiveness.

There was no “race winning configuration” hiding in the setup sheets.


The Brazil Exception – The Weekend That Almost Rewrote History​

SĂŁo Paulo Grand Prix – Interlagos​

If 2022 had an asterisk, it was Brazil.

For one extraordinary weekend, the factors that destroyed the W13 aligned in reverse:

  • bumpy surface disrupted floor resonance frequency,
  • reduced porpoising sensitivity,
  • cooler temperatures broadened the operating window,
  • short lap length amplified trade‑offs in Mercedes’ favour.

Sprint and Race​

George Russell took pole for the Sprint.Mercedes locked out the front row.Russell won the Sprint.Russell led the race.Hamilton finished second.

For the only time all season, Mercedes:

  • ran low enough,
  • loaded the floor properly,
  • trusted the car under braking,
  • and imposed pace.
This was not luck.

It was a physics glitch.


Why Brazil Was So Dangerous Internally​

The São Paulo result almost derailed Mercedes’ introspection.

Because for one weekend, the zero‑sidepod car:

  • behaved,
  • made sense,
  • and delivered dominance.
This created a tempting narrative:

“The concept works — we just need more time.”
Had Brazil occurred earlier in the season, Mercedes might have doubled down.

Instead, its lateness made the truth unavoidable.


Abu Dhabi – A Season Ends Without Closure​

Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Yas Marina Circuit​

The final race of 2022 returned Mercedes to reality.

Hotter conditions.Smooth surface.Long loaded corners.High energy demand.

The W13 fell back into its familiar limits.

Hamilton completed the season without a win for the first time in his Formula One career. Russell finished reliably, professionally, and without illusion.

There was no emotional send‑off.No symbolic victory.No reconciliation moment.

Just exhaustion.


The Russell vs Hamilton Scoreline — What 2022 Actually Meant​

Russell finished ahead of Hamilton in the standings.

Historically, this will always be footnoted.

But internally, Mercedes understood 2022 very clearly:

  • Hamilton carried conceptual direction,
  • Russell absorbed instability earlier,
  • neither driver had a weapon.
Russell’s Brazil win mattered less for hierarchy than for proof of capability under the right conditions — a confidence that would quietly anchor Mercedes’ future driver planning.


The Psychological Impact Inside Brackley​

2022 broke something fundamental at Mercedes:

Certainty.

Not confidence.Not morale.Certainty.

For the first time since 2014, Mercedes accepted that:

  • they could be wrong at concept level,
  • their tools could mislead,
  • and iteration does not always lead forward.
This loss of certainty drove:

  • the conservative W14 in 2023,
  • the half‑reset W15 in 2024,
  • the patience of the W16 in 2025,
  • and the ruthlessness of the W17 in 2026.

Why Mercedes Did Not Abandon Zero‑Pods Immediately After 2022​

This is the most misunderstood consequence of the season.

Mercedes kept the zero‑sidepod philosophy into early 2023 not because they believed it was right — but because:

  • they had not yet mapped why it was wrong,
  • abandoning it prematurely risked repeating the same mistake twice,
  • and the cost‑cap punished panic more than patience.
2022 taught Mercedes to understand first — even at competitive cost.

That discipline is what Red Bull once had.Mercedes had to relearn it the hard way.


The Paradox of 2022: Failure That Prevented Collapse​

This is the final irony.

2022 was catastrophic competitively — but organisationally perfect.

Mercedes:

  • did not splinter internally,
  • did not blame drivers,
  • did not tear up leadership structure,
  • did not abandon process under pressure.
Had they scraped a win?Had Brazil turned into a late‑season resurgence?Had Hamilton won once?

Those outcomes might have delayed the reset that saved them.


Final Verdict – The Season Mercedes Had to Lose​

Mercedes 2022 will never be remembered fondly.

No wins.Driver pain.Technical humiliation.Public disbelief.

But it was the necessary destruction layer:

  • it killed blind confidence,
  • it exposed conceptual arrogance,
  • it forced intellectual humility.
Everything that follows in this archive —

  • 2023’s safe second,
  • 2024’s false revival,
  • 2025’s managed transition,
  • 2026’s resurgence —
only exists because Mercedes were willing to endure 2022 without lying to themselves.


✅ Mercedes 2022 Trilogy Complete​

You now have the full canon:

  • Part I – The zero‑pod shock
  • Part II – Denial and understanding
  • Part III – Brazil, no wins, and organisational rewiring
Stacked with:

 

Kimi Antonelli Poll

  • already championship‑calibre

    Votes: 3 60.0%
  • need a season of resistance first

    Votes: 2 40.0%

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