Formula 1 Season 2023: The Ups and Downs of MercedesâAMG PETRONAS
Part I: The W14 Compromise, Conceptual Hangover, and a Team Between Eras
Opening Context â The Year Mercedes Tried to Be Sensible
Mercedes entered the 2023 Formula One season chastened but not humbled.After a bruising 2022 â their first winless season since 2011 â the team arrived determined to stabilise. Crucially, 2023 was not framed internally as a titleâwinning year. It was framed as:
- a recovery year,
- a validation year,
- and a test of whether Mercedes still understood modern Formula One.
Organisational Foundations in 2023
Leadership Stability, Philosophical Uncertainty
Mercedesâ senior structure was unchanged:- Toto Wolff â Team Principal & CEO
- Mike Elliott â Technical Director (early 2023)
- James Allison â Chief Technical Officer (returned midâseason)
- Andrew Shovlin â Trackside Engineering Director
- Hywel Thomas â Managing Director, Power Unit (HPP)
The W14 would begin the year as a compromise car â not a revolution, not a clean reset.
The Drivers â Equilibrium Without Hierarchy
Lewis Hamilton â Still the Reference
In 2023, Lewis Hamilton remained Mercedesâ performance barometer.Despite the teamâs struggles:
- he finished every race he started,
- consistently extracted results above the W14âs apparent ceiling,
- and played a leading role in technical redirection midâseason.
George Russell â A Season of Containment
Russell entered 2023 off the back of a strongerâthanâexpected 2022, including a win at SĂŁoâŻPaulo. Expectations were high.The reality was harsher.
Russell found himself with:
- fewer peak performances,
- increased involvement in incidents,
- and a car that punished overâcommitment.
The Car â Mercedes W14 E Performance
A Car Designed to Avoid Disaster
The Mercedes W14 was not conceived to dominate.Its primary goals were:
- reduce porpoising,
- stabilise rear behaviour,
- reâestablish predictable handling.
- floor geometry,
- suspension tuning,
- and aerodynamic load distribution.
Immediate Limitation â Too Many Windows, No Sweet Spot
From the opening races, one problem became clear:The W14 could behave reasonably well in:
- cool conditions,
- mediumâspeed corners,
- low tyre degradation scenarios.
- track temperatures rose,
- long loaded corners dominated,
- or ride height sensitivity changed.
Opening Flyaway Rounds â Damage Limitation Mode
Bahrain Grand Prix â Bahrain International Circuit
The season opened brutally.Red Bull disappeared into the distance. Mercedes fought Ferrari â and sometimes Aston Martin â for residual positions.
Hamilton finished P5, Russell P7, more than 50 seconds behind the leader.
The message was clear: Mercedes were not even the secondâbest team.
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix â Jeddah Corniche Circuit
Jeddah sharpened the edges:- unstable rear at high speed,
- traction weaknesses out of slow corners,
- limited DRS effectiveness.
Australian Grand Prix â Albert Park
Chaos elevated Mercedes artificially.Multiple red flags and restarts allowed Hamilton to claim a podium finish, but internally this result was dismissed as contextual rather than earned.
The W14 still lacked authority.
The Aston Martin Shock
Perhaps the most destabilising element of early 2023 was Aston Martin.With Fernando Alonso repeatedly finishing on the podium, Mercedes were forced to confront an uncomfortable truth: a customer team, using their powerâunit, had overtaken them on chassis design and concept clarity.
This triggered the first major internal reâevaluation of the W14âs architecture.
The Internal Pivot â James Allison Returns
Midâseason, Mercedes made a decisive structural change:- James Allison returned to a handsâon technical leadership role,
- Mike Elliott moved away from trackâfacing development responsibility.
But crucially, this pivot would not fully materialise until 2024.
2023 would remain a hybrid season â half old belief, half new understanding.
Patterns Established by MidâSpring
By the end of the early phase, Mercedes understood:Strengths
- operational excellence,
- reliability,
- Hamiltonâs adaptability.
- lack of peak downforce,
- poor correlation windows,
- conceptual limitation in floor and sidepod geometry.
Closing of Part I â A Season Without Illusions
Mercedes did not enter 2023 expecting miracles.But they did expect progress â and the early season suggested that progress would be slow, expensive, and politically painful inside the organisation.
The question became:
Would Mercedes double down on a flawed idea â or prepare themselves to admit defeat and start again?
That question defined everything that followed.
Coming in
- The MonacoâSpainâCanada arc
- Mercedes become âbest of the restâ
- Russell vs Hamilton divergence
- Why consistency became a trap
Mercedes 2023 Trilogy Complete