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Toto Wolff to 'Recalibrate' Mercedes Racing Rules After Barcelona
15 June 2026PlanetF1Breaking newsAnalysis

Toto Wolff to 'Recalibrate' Mercedes Racing Rules After Barcelona

Toto Wolff plans to rethink Mercedes' hands-off approach to team orders after George Russell and Kimi Antonelli's intra-team battle in Barcelona cost the squad crucial points and handed Lewis Hamilton a free victory.

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff has vowed to "recalibrate" how his drivers race each other after Kimi Antonelli and George Russell's wheel-to-wheel battle in Barcelona handed Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton a comfortable victory. The latest flashpoint ended with Antonelli suffering an electrical shutdown on Lap 61, marking the second intra-team fight in three races to end in retirement.

Why it matters:

Mercedes' "let them race" philosophy is bleeding constructors' points at the worst possible time. With Hamilton emerging as a genuine third title contender, internal squabbles are handing their rivals an open goal. Wolff's frustration signals a potential policy shift that could redefine team dynamics at Brackley.

The details:

  • Barcelona fallout: Hamilton undercut both Mercedes drivers with an early second stop and inherited the lead. While Russell and Antonelli fought over second place—making contact that broke Antonelli's front wing—Hamilton disappeared up the road.
  • Repeat offender: The Barcelona DNF follows Russell's "catastrophic battery" failure in Canada while the pair were battling, costing Mercedes 25 points in Montreal and another 18 in Spain.
  • Wolff's warning: "In order to finish first, first you have to finish," he stated, insisting reliability and discipline must improve.
  • Championship picture: Despite his DNF, Antonelli leads with 156 points to Hamilton's 115. Russell sits a further nine back. Mercedes holds a 262-190 advantage over Ferrari in the Constructors' standings.

What's next:

Wolff will sit down with both drivers to discuss handling future pace differentials without holding each other up. While Mercedes has historically shied away from team orders, a three-way championship fight is forcing a strategic rethink. The conversation will likely focus on protecting collective interests while preserving their racing ethos.

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