Formula 1 Season 2021: The Ups and Downs of MercedesâAMG PETRONAS
Part I: The W12 Under Pressure and the First Cracks in the Empire
Opening Context â Champions Who Finally Had an Equal
Mercedes arrived at the 2021 Formula One season as the undisputed reference team of the turboâhybrid era.Seven consecutive Driversâ Championships.
Seven consecutive Constructorsâ Championships.
A culture of calm dominance so engrained it felt permanent.
But 2021 was the year that permanence cracked â not suddenly, but visibly.
For the first time since 2013, Mercedes entered a season knowing they no longer held a clear technical advantage. Red Bull had closed the gap. Honda had delivered. And the regulation tweaks aimed at floor downforce had hurt lowârake cars like the Mercedes W12 more than highârake rivals. [en.wikipedia.org]
This would be Mercedesâ most difficult championship campaign â and their most emotionally expensive.
Organisational Foundations in 2021
Leadership at Full Strength â for the Last Time
Mercedesâ senior structure in 2021 represented the peak of the hybridâera organisation:- Toto Wolff â Team Principal & CEO
- James Allison â Technical Director
- Mike Elliott â Technology Director
- John Owen â Chief Designer
- Andrew Shovlin â Trackside Engineering Director
- Hywel Thomas â Managing Director, Power Unit (HPP)
But 2021 would push them harder than any season before â not technically, but psychologically.
The Drivers â Proven Weapons, Rising Tension
Lewis Hamilton â Defending Champion Under Siege
Lewis Hamilton entered 2021 as:- reigning world champion,
- architect of Mercedesâ success,
- the most complete race operator on the grid.
Hamilton was no longer managing advantage â he was fighting for survival. For the first time in years, risk management, not dominance, defined his weekends.
Valtteri Bottas â The Weak Link Under Spotlight
While Mercedes fought Red Bull at the front, internal tension built quietly.Valtteri Bottas entered his contract year under increasing pressure:
- inconsistent race starts,
- uneven qualifying execution,
- and limited defensive effectiveness against Verstappen.
This would later factor into Mercedesâ 2022 driver reshuffle.
The Car â Mercedes W12 E Performance
From Benchmark to Contender
The W12 was still elite â but no longer untouchable.Key regulatory changes for 2021:
- floor edge reductions,
- diffuser strake limitations,
- and rearâfloor cutâouts,
The loss of the DAS system also removed Mercedesâ last major driverâoperated differential advantage.
The result was a car that required far more precision to reach its ceiling.
Early Signs â Testing and Bahrain
Preâseason testing hinted at a shift in the order.Red Bull looked sharper. Mercedes looked⊠uncertain.
At Bahrain, Verstappen took pole. Hamilton won â but only through aggressive tyre management and a controversial offâtrack moment during a pass attempt by Verstappen.
Mercedes left Bahrain knowing something uncomfortable:
That knowledge shaped the entire season. [lastwordonsports.com]âWe can still win â but only if we execute perfectly.â
The Early Pattern â Swinging Momentum
Through the opening flyaways:- Bahrain,
- Imola,
- PortimĂŁo,
Hamiltonâs recoveries masked small but compounding problems:
- qualifying deficits,
- tyre degradation variability,
- and vulnerability on highâenergy tracks.
The Psychological Shift Begins
What made 2021 different was not pace loss alone.It was exposure.
Mercedes were now:
- reacting raceâtoârace,
- forced to answer Red Bullâs moves,
- and seeing futures where they were no longer ahead.
Closing of Part I â The Last Calm Before the Storm
Mercedes in early 2021 were still champions.Still lethal.
Still methodical.
Still capable of brilliance.
But they were no longer insulated.
Every small error mattered.Every strategic indecision cost points.Every weak second car became magnified.
The empire had not fallen â but the walls were shaking.
Coming in
- Silverstone, Monza, and the collisions
- The BottasâPĂ©rez contrast
- Political warfare with Red Bull
- Why Mercedes stayed in the fight far longer than expected