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🏁 Formula 1 Season 2024: The Ups and Downs of Mercedes‑AMG PETRONAS​

Part I: The W15 Reset, the Hamilton Farewell, and a Season That Never Found Its Centre​


Opening Context – The End Begins Before the First Race​

Mercedes entered the 2024 Formula One season in an unusual state:
technically hopeful, emotionally fractured, and structurally transitional.

Before a wheel was turned in anger, the defining fact of the season was already known:
Lewis Hamilton would leave Mercedes at the end of the year.

That knowledge sat over the entire campaign. Internally, externally, psychologically — 2024 was never just about lap time. It was about:

  • the final year of the most successful driver‑team partnership in F1 history,
  • Mercedes’ last attempt to salvage the ground‑effect era,
  • and a technical reset that admitted previous philosophies had failed. [lastwordonsports.com], [racefans.net]

Organisational Foundations in 2024​

Leadership: Continuity Under Strain​

Mercedes’ senior leadership remained intact, but under sustained pressure:

  • Toto Wolff – Team Principal & CEO
  • James Allison – Technical Director (returned 2023)
  • John Owen – Car Design Director
  • Jarrod Murphy – Aerodynamics Director
  • Andrew Shovlin – Trackside Engineering Director
  • Hywel Thomas – Managing Director, Power Unit (HPP)
The key difference in 2024 was not personnel — it was accountability.

Wolff and Allison publicly acknowledged that the team’s understanding of the 2022–2023 regulations had been flawed. The W15 would be a full philosophical relaunch, not a patch-up. [formula1.com]


The Drivers – One Foot Out the Door, One Carrying the Future​

Lewis Hamilton – A Farewell Season Without Closure​

Hamilton’s final Mercedes season was defined by contradiction.

On one hand:

  • unmatched experience,
  • supreme racecraft,
  • and emotional investment in leaving the team “the right way”.
On the other:

  • a car that frequently worked against his driving instincts,
  • a development path no longer shaped around his future,
  • and the unspoken reality that every success raised the question: why could this not have been given earlier?. [lastwordonsports.com], [f1i.com]

George Russell – The Driver Who Could Not Fully Take Over (Yet)​

Russell began 2024 nominally as joint leader.

In practice, he was:

  • protecting Mercedes’ future,
  • absorbing development risk,
  • often taking experimental setups Hamilton avoided.
This created an imbalance: Russell contributed long‑term value, while Hamilton often extracted one‑lap peaks when the car briefly worked.

Neither driver was wrong. But the dynamic made consistency impossible.


The Car – Mercedes W15 E Performance​

A Conceptual Admission of Defeat​

The W15 marked the complete abandonment of Mercedes’ “zero‑sidepod” philosophy.

For the first time since the ground‑effect era began, Mercedes:

The goal, per James Allison, was not outright pace — but predictability.


Reality: A Car With Opposing Problems​

Instead, the W15 developed a notorious dual‑personality:

  • low‑speed understeer (“the slower you go, the less it wants to turn” – Hamilton)
  • high‑speed rear instability, especially through fast directional changes. [lastwordonsports.com], [f1i.com]
This meant:

  • tracks like Monaco and Singapore were nightmares,
  • high‑speed circuits could expose sudden grip loss,
  • setup sensitivity became extreme.

Opening Rounds – Regression Before Recovery​

Bahrain Grand Prix – Bahrain International Circuit​

Russell qualified P3, briefly raising hopes the W15 had found a baseline.

They were dashed within a stint:

  • overheating tyres,
  • energy deployment issues,
  • steep performance drop‑off.
Russell finished P5. Hamilton finished P7, at one point reporting his battery at 1% mid‑race.

This was a sobering start. [lastwordonsports.com]


Saudi Arabian Grand Prix – Jeddah Corniche Circuit​

Jeddah amplified the W15’s failings:

  • fast corners punished rear instability,
  • traction zones exposed balance inconsistency.
Russell finished sixth, Hamilton eighth — anonymous results at a track Mercedes once dominated.


Australian Grand Prix – Albert Park​

The low point arrived early.

Both Mercedes cars retired in Australia, delivering a double DNF that shattered remaining optimism. Early‑season execution, usually Mercedes’ strength, collapsed.

This race cemented the truth: the W15 was not a clean step forward. It was a compromise laden with unresolved issues.


First Glimmers – Isolated High Points​

Despite the grim opening, the season offered flashes:

  • China Sprint – Hamilton finished second
  • Montreal upgrades later delivered podiums
  • engineers began to understand temperature sensitivity windows
But these moments were episodic, not foundational.


The Structural Problem Revealed​

By the end of the opening phase, Mercedes understood something uncomfortable:

  • The W15 was track‑specific, not adaptable
  • Development gains changed balance rather than improving it
  • The car worked around limits, not through them
James Allison would later describe 2024 as a season of “lost opportunity”, despite wins that would follow. [motorsportweek.com]


Closing of Part I – A Season Without Direction (Yet)​

Mercedes did not enter 2024 lacking effort or intelligence.

They entered lacking conceptual certainty.

The W15 could win races — but not on demand, not predictably, and not sustainably. And looming over everything was the approaching end of the Hamilton era, removing the emotional safety net that once absorbed technical failure.

The question heading into mid‑season was simple:

Could Mercedes salvage significance from a broken season — or would 2024 become merely a waiting room for 2025 and 2026?


▶️ Coming in​

  • Austria: Russell’s first win
  • Silverstone: Hamilton’s emotional victory
  • Spa: controversy and dual success
  • The illusion of a mid‑season revival
 

🏁 Formula 1 Season 2024: The Ups and Downs of Mercedes‑AMG PETRONAS​

Part II: Austria, Emotion, and the Mirage of a Mid‑Season Revival​


Austria – The First Crack in the Ceiling​

Austrian Grand Prix – Red Bull Ring​

Mercedes’ 2024 season changed tone at the Red Bull Ring, a circuit whose short lap, heavy braking zones, and repeated traction events tend to compress performance gaps.

George Russell’s victory in Austria was Mercedes’ first Grand Prix win since São Paulo 2022, and it arrived through a blend of:

  • late‑race composure,
  • opportunistic positioning,
  • and superior tyre survival in the closing phase.
Russell did not dominate the weekend, but he capitalised. Crucially, neither Red Bull nor McLaren were able to control the race through strategy once temperatures stabilised.

This win mattered less for points and more for belief: it proved the W15 could still stand on the top step, even if only under narrow circumstances. [f1dailybrief.com]


Silverstone – Hamilton’s Last Stand at Home​

British Grand Prix – Silverstone Circuit​

If Austria reopened the door, Silverstone blew it wide open emotionally.

Lewis Hamilton’s victory at Silverstone was one of the most charged moments of the 2024 season — not just for Mercedes, but for the sport. It was:

  • Hamilton’s final win at his home Grand Prix as a Mercedes driver
  • the team’s first victory on merit at a high‑speed downforce circuit that season
  • a triumph layered with symbolism rather than strategic cleverness
The W15 worked at Silverstone because:

  • long, loaded corners such as Copse, Maggotts–Becketts, and Stowe played to its aerodynamic strengths
  • cooler ambient conditions kept rear instability under control
  • Hamilton could commit with confidence — something rarely possible earlier in the year
The crowd response and internal reaction briefly masked the underlying reality: the car had not fundamentally changed. Conditions had.

Still, for Mercedes, this was validation that something had finally been unlocked — even if temporarily. [f1dailybrief.com]


Spa – Victory, Controversy, and Confirmation Bias​

Belgian Grand Prix – Circuit de Spa‑Francorchamps​

Spa was the most misleading Mercedes weekend of the entire season.

On track, George Russell crossed the line first after executing a bold one‑stop strategy, nursing worn tyres across Spa’s long lap. His drive through Eau Rouge–Raidillon, Pouhon, and Blanchimont showcased exceptional management.

Post‑race, Russell was disqualified for a car weight infringement, promoting Lewis Hamilton to victory.

On paper:

  • Mercedes won two races in three
  • the W15 appeared competitive across very different circuits
  • internal optimism peaked
In reality:

  • Spa’s high‑speed efficiency masked the W15’s low‑speed weaknesses
  • extreme race circumstances exaggerated outcome over underlying pace
  • the disqualification exposed how close Mercedes were operating to the edge
James Allison would later note that Spa fed a false sense of progression — data that suggested momentum where none truly existed. [fia.com]


Why the “Revival” Was an Illusion​

Across Austria, Silverstone, and Spa, three constants emerged:

  1. All wins occurred in cooler conditions
  2. All required precise setup windows
  3. None translated to consistent form at the next event
The W15 had not become adaptable — it had become situationally lethal.

This distinction mattered.

Mercedes could now win races — but only when circuits and weather aligned. Championship contention requires repeatability, not perfection under ideal circumstances.


The Development Split – Russell vs Hamilton​

This mid‑season phase also sharpened internal contrasts.

Lewis Hamilton​

  • favoured confidence‑inspiring setups
  • extracted peak performance when rear stability was present
  • lost patience when development swings destabilised the car

George Russell​

  • absorbed experimental configurations
  • ran alternative specifications when new parts were limited
  • focused on long‑term understanding rather than short‑term reward
This dynamic peaked late in the season when Hamilton and Russell often ran different‑spec W15s, particularly visible at circuits like Austin and Mexico, where Mercedes compared upgrade directions in real time. [formula1archive.com]


Constructors’ Reality Check​

Despite four wins (Austria, Britain, Belgium, Las Vegas), Mercedes remained fourth in the Constructors’ Championship by mid‑season.

McLaren and Ferrari consistently out‑scored them on “average” weekends. Mercedes oscillated between brilliance and anonymity — a trait that destroyed any sustained momentum.

This was the true cost of the W15:
it rewarded peaks but punished variance.


Closing of Part II – When Hope Outran Reality​

Mid‑2024 will forever be remembered as the moment when Mercedes nearly convinced themselves they were back.

Austria proved they could win.
Silverstone proved they still mattered.
Spa proved the danger of misreading context.

But dominance is not a memory — it is a system. And Mercedes had not yet rebuilt theirs.


▶️ Coming in​

  • Las Vegas: the cold‑weather masterpiece
  • The final Hamilton–Russell dynamic
  • Abu Dhabi and the season’s final reckoning
  • Why 2024 made 2025 unavoidable — and 2026 inevitable
 

🏁 Formula 1 Season 2024: The Ups and Downs of Mercedes‑AMG PETRONAS​

Part III: Cold‑Weather Brilliance, the Final Hamilton Chapter, and the Reckoning​


Las Vegas – When the W15 Finally Made Sense​

Las Vegas Grand Prix – Las Vegas Strip Circuit​

If there was one weekend that explained why Mercedes kept believing in the W15, it was Las Vegas.

At the Las Vegas Strip Circuit, everything aligned:

  • cold ambient temperatures,
  • low asphalt grip,
  • long straights demanding efficiency,
  • and repeated traction zones that suited Mercedes’ conservative mechanical platform.
For once, the W15 was not fighting itself.

Qualifying – A Statement Lap​

George Russell took pole position with a lap built on:

  • excellent rear stability through the long, sweeping sections,
  • and superior electrical deployment down the Strip Straight.
This was the W15 at its purest: calm, predictable, and finally exploitable.


Race – A Mercedes One‑Two​

On Sunday, Mercedes delivered their first one‑two finish since São Paulo 2022:

  • Russell won with authority,
  • Hamilton followed home in second,
  • Ferrari completed the podium.
Importantly, this was not a tactical fluke or late‑race inheritance — it was a controlled Mercedes race from lights to flag.

The irony was unavoidable:
the W15 delivered its clearest performance at the exact moment the season no longer mattered. [sportskhabri.com], [formula1.com]


Why Las Vegas Didn’t Change the Big Picture​

Despite the scale of the result, Las Vegas did not rewrite 2024.

Instead, it underlined three truths Mercedes already knew:

  1. The W15 thrived in cold conditions
  2. The car needed minimal tyre energy input to behave
  3. Performance was situational, not transferable
Las Vegas was validation — but also a ceiling.


The Final Hamilton–Mercedes Dynamic​

Cooperation, But No More Concessions​

By the final rounds, the internal dynamic had subtly shifted.

  • Hamilton was no longer shaping the future direction
  • Russell was increasingly absorbing development responsibility
  • Mercedes prioritised data gathering over driver accommodation
This created a respectful but emotionally distant finale to the Hamilton era. There were no public disputes, no fireworks — just professionalism layered with inevitability.

Hamilton extracted what the W15 could give. Russell built understanding for what came next.


Abu Dhabi – Closing the Ground‑Effect Era​

Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Yas Marina Circuit​

The final race of 2024 belonged to neither driver nor team.

At Yas Marina, Mercedes were once again exposed by:

  • high track temperatures,
  • sustained lateral loads,
  • and the W15’s narrow operating window.
Russell finished outside the podium; Hamilton ended his Mercedes career with a clean but unspectacular drive.

This was fitting.

Abu Dhabi did not offer redemption or collapse — it offered finality.

[grandtournation.com]


Season Statistics in Context​

  • Constructors’ Championship: P4
  • Wins: 4
    • Russell: Austria, Las Vegas
    • Hamilton: Great Britain, Belgium
  • One‑Two Finishes: 1 (Las Vegas)
  • Lowest Constructors’ Finish since 2012
On paper, four wins suggest competitiveness.

In reality, they masked inconsistency.


James Allison’s Verdict: “Lost Opportunity”​

Technical Director James Allison later summarised 2024 bluntly as a season of lost opportunity — not because Mercedes lacked talent, but because the car never allowed repetition of success.

The W15 could be:

  • excellent,
  • average,
  • or unmanageable,
often from one weekend to the next. [fia.com]

That unpredictability is fatal in modern Formula One.


Why Mercedes 2024 Had to Fail for Mercedes 2025 to Exist​

The key outcome of 2024 was not results — it was acceptance.

Mercedes finally accepted that:

  • incremental fixes were exhausted,
  • driver extraction could not compensate for architecture,
  • and chasing performance within a dying regulation set was inefficient.
This acceptance unlocked three decisions:

  1. A measured 2025 season focused on stability
  2. Immediate elevation of George Russell as team leader
  3. Total technical focus on the 2026 power‑unit reset
Without the frustration of 2024, Mercedes would not have had the discipline to endure 2025 — or the clarity to dominate early 2026.


Final Verdict – A Season That Doesn’t Age Politely​

Mercedes 2024 was:

  • not disastrous,
  • not successful,
  • and not forgettable.
It was the final stress test of a team trying to bend regulations that no longer suited them.

The wins mattered emotionally.
The losses mattered structurally.

Above all, 2024 closed the Hamilton era not with dominance, but with honesty — and that honesty reshaped everything that followed.


✅ Mercedes 2024 Trilogy Complete​

full season archive:

  • Part I – The W15 reset and early failure
  • Part II – The mid‑season mirage
  • Part III – Cold‑weather brilliance and final reckoning
This fits perfectly alongside:

  • Mercedes 2025 (transition year)
  • Mercedes 2026 (reset dominance)
  • Red Bull 2021 (historic collision season)
 

Kimi Antonelli Poll

  • already championship‑calibre

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

    Votes: 2 40.0%

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