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Wolff: Bottas’ Australia performance his strongest in any category

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MELBOURNE GRAND PRIX CIRCUIT, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 16: Toto Wolff, Executive Director (Business),

Valtteri Bottas first appeared on Toto Wolff’s radar in 2008, the same year he won out from a certain Daniel Ricciardo in the Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 series. And having watched almost every race Bottas has competed in since, the Mercedes Team Principal has hailed the Finn’s race-winning performance at the 2019 Australian Grand Prix as ‘the strongest’ he’s seen.

There were many who feared Bottas would never recover from a gruelling, win-less 2018 series that left him telling reporters after that year’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix that he wanted “to have some time off and time to think about things”, as team mate Hamilton romped to his fifth world championship.

But after winning out convincingly from Hamilton at the Melbourne season-opener, Mercedes team boss and Bottas’ former driver manager Wolff had nothing but praise for him.

Everything felt so good! - Bottas hails 'best race ever' after Australian GP win

“I’ve seen most of the races in his career in all categories and this was the strongest,” said Wolff. “I’m very happy and he deserves it.”

Andrea Caldarelli (ITA) SG Formula  2nd, Valtteri Bottas (FIN) Motopark Academy 1st, Roberto Merhi

Wolff was reminded of 2008-spec Bottas

Speaking in Mercedes’ post-race media session, Wolff went on to relate the story of how he’d met Bottas ahead of his 2008 Formula Renault campaign, a year that saw Bottas and Ricciardo engage in titanic push-pull struggle before the Finn eventually emerged as the title winner by three points.

“In 2008, I got a call from a young boy who asked for a meeting,” said Wolff. “It was a snowy day in Vienna, and this young Finnish boy came in with a pullover, no jacket, and asked for advice.

“He went on to dominate the Formula Renault EuroCup, in a strong year with [Jean-Eric] Vergne, [Daniel] Ricciardo, [Roberto] Mehri, he almost lapped the whole field. This is the Valtteri Bottas that I have seen yesterday and today. It was in him.

“I think that maybe these years at Williams, and then the shock draft into Mercedes, was something that he needed to digest. He went off tired at the end of the season and came back and the 2008 young man came back.

“How he recovered from being written off, not up for the job in the second half of the season last year to scoring one of the most dominant victories that we’ve seen in recent [times] shows us that human potential, how much it is a mind game. For me, it’s a bit of a fairy-tale: don’t let others break you, believe in yourself and he has showed that the whole weekend. Not one single session that he wasn’t good enough.

“[Last year] when he left after the Christmas party, he said he was tired and he needed to recover because it was the most sh*tty half of the season he has ever had. And he came back end of January and said: ‘I’m back!’”

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Valtteri Bottas: 'The best race of my life'

Bottas didn’t just win the Melbourne race, he also set the fastest lap in its closing stages to secure himself the new-for-2019 bonus point. It meant a perfect 44-point haul for Mercedes, though Wolff had mixed feelings about the risk involved.

“In the morning meeting, when we talked about strategy, I forbid to go for fastest lap if we were running one, two or three. They ignored me. I think it was a plot between the engineers and the drivers! Because I think the engineers were keen and the drivers were keen!

“In the end I’m very happy - collecting that extra point is good, it’s entertaining, it’s a great new part of the spectacle. I believe it’s taking risks, especially when you’re in for the big points - should you go for the fastest laps? But my reference point, being in control of a car, is my own driving and not the level of the F1 drivers. I didn’t like it so much!”

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