Full name | Mercedes GP Petronas Formula One Team |
---|---|
Base | Brackley,Northamptonshire, United Kingdom Stuttgart, Germany |
Team principal(s) | Ross Brawn |
CEO | Nick Fry |
2010 Formula One season | |
Race drivers | 3. Michael Schumacher 4. Nico Rosberg |
Chassis | Mercedes MGP W01 |
Engine | Mercedes-Benz FO 108X |
Tyres | Bridgestone |
2011 Formula One season | |
Race drivers | 7. Michael Schumacher 8. Nico Rosberg |
Test drivers | TBA |
Chassis | TBA |
Engine | Mercedes-Benz |
Tyres | Pirelli |
Formula One World Championship Career | |
Debut | 1954 French Grand Prix |
Latest race | 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix |
Races competed | 31 |
Constructors' Championships | 0 |
Drivers' Championships | 2 (1954, 1955) |
Race victories | 9 |
Pole positions | 8 |
Fastest laps | 9 |
2010 position | 4th (214 points) |
Mercedes
GP Petronas F1 Team, the trading name of Mercedes-Benz Grand Prix
Limited, is the Formula One racing team and constructor of
Mercedes-Benz, which raced in the 2010 season. Mercedes-Benz debuted in
Formula One in 1954, and competed with great success in the 1954 and
1955 seasons. However, after the 1955 season, Mercedes left the sport,
and despite part-ownerships, and engine supplier deals in the 1990s and
2000s, it did not return as a factory team until November 2009. After a
fifteen-year relationship with the McLaren team, Mercedes-Benz (through
parent Daimler AG), in partnership with Aabar Investments, reached an
agreement to purchase a 75.1% stake (Daimler: 45.1%; Aabar: 30%), in the
Brawn GP team, pending corporate and regulatory approval. Brawn had won
the drivers' and constructors' championships in the 2009 season, their
only season as a team following their buy-out of the Honda Racing F1
team.
Former
Williams driver Nico Rosberg has been joined by seven-time World
Champion Michael Schumacher for the team's maiden racing season. Nick
Heidfeld was originally the test and reserve driver, but he left the
team in August to take up a similar role at Pirelli prior to moving into
a race seat for Sauber.
Early history
Mercedes in Grand Prix motor racing (1930s–1955)
Mercedes-Benz
formerly competed in Grand Prix motor racing in the 1930s, when the
Silver Arrows dominated alongside rivals Auto Union. Both teams were
heavily funded by the Nazi regime, winning all European Grand Prix
Championships after 1932, of which Rudolf Caracciola won three for
Mercedes-Benz.
In
1954 Mercedes-Benz returned to what was now known as Formula One racing
(a World championship having been established in 1950), using the
technologically advanced Mercedes-Benz W196 which was run in both
open-wheeled and streamlined forms. Juan Manuel Fangio, a previous
champion (1951) transferred mid-season from Maserati to Mercedes-Benz
for their debut at the French Grand Prix on 4 July 1954. The team had
immediate success and recorded a 1-2 victory with Fangio and Karl Kling,
as well as the fastest lap (Hans Herrmann). Fangio went on to win three
more races in 1954, winning the Championship.
The
success continued into the 1955 season, where the same car was used
again. Mercedes again dominated the season, with Fangio taking four
races, and his new team mate Stirling Moss the British Grand Prix.
Fangio and Moss finished first and second in that year's championship.
The disaster at the 24 Hours of Le Mans on 11 June which killed Mercedes
sportscar driver Pierre Levegh and over 80 spectators led to the
cancellations of the French, German, Spanish and Swiss Grands Prix. The
team withdrew from motor sport, including Formula One, at the end of the
season.
The
company made a return to the sport in 1993 by unofficially supplying
the Sauber team with engines, a partnership which was made official the
following year. For 1995, Mercedes switched its engine supply to the
McLaren team and bought a minority shareholding in the team. McLaren won
three drivers' championships and one constructors' championship between
1995 and 2009. In 2009, Mercedes began supplying additional engines to
the Brawn GP and Force India teams; Brawn won both championships.
]Pre-Mercedes
The
current Mercedes team can be traced back to the long-running Tyrrell
Racing team, who competed as a constructor from 1970 until 1998. Tyrrell
became British American Racing in 1999 who formed a partnership with
Honda, eventually becoming Honda Racing F1 Team in 2006. Mercedes'
predecessor, Brawn GP, was formed from the remains of the Honda Racing
F1 Team after Honda's withdrawal in December 2008. The team was
purchased by the team's management and re-branded as Brawn GP. Their
association with Mercedes began when the team opted to use the
Mercedes-Benz High Performance Engines FO 108W at the last minute.
Mercedes had required special provisions to supply Brawn as the
regulations at the time dictated that an engine supplier could only
supply two teams, and Mercedes supplied engines to both McLaren and
Force India.
The
team won its first race at the 2009 Australian Grand Prix, with Jenson
Button winning six of their first seven races and ultimately going on to
win the 2009 World Championship while team-mate Rubens Barrichello
claimed victory in Valencia and Italy. Both Button and Brawn went on to
seal the Drivers' and Constructors' World Championships in the
penultimate race in Brazil. It was the first time in the sport's
sixty-year history that a team won both titles in its maiden season.
2010: Return to Formula One
Acquisition of Brawn GP
Further information: 2010 Formula One season
On
16 November 2009, it was officially confirmed that Mercedes would take
over the running of Brawn, with Ross Brawn continuing his duties as team
principal. The team will continue to use its base in Brackley, United
Kingdom, which is fewer than 30 miles away from Mercedes' Formula One
engine plant in Brixworth.
Nico
Rosberg was announced as the team's first driver on 23 November 2009
and on 23 December 2009, seven-times world champion Michael Schumacher
announced that he will be returning to Formula 1, this time with the
Mercedes team. Of Brawn's 2009 drivers, Jenson Button signed for
McLaren, whilst Rubens Barrichello moved to the Williams team for 2010,
resulting in Mercedes selecting a new driver line-up of Michael
Schumacher and Nico Rosberg. The acquisition of Brawn meant that
Mercedes parted ways with McLaren. The 40% stake that Daimler (which
owns Mercedes) has in McLaren since January 2000 will be sold back to
the McLaren Group for a reported £500m. One reason for Mercedes parting
ways with McLaren was "because of McLaren's ambitious plans to build
road cars", as McLaren plan to put the McLaren MP4-12C in production by
2011. However Mercedes said it would continue to supply engines to
McLaren until 2015.
Nico Rosberg scored Mercedes' first podium finish as a works team since 1955 at the 2010 Malaysian Grand Prix.
Sponsorship
In
December 2009, the team suffered an early setback when it was
discovered that a planned £80m sponsorship arrangement that had been
signed by Brawn with Henkel in July was invalid. Henkel claim they were
unaware of the deal and have no interest in Formula One; the deal was
allegedly made by a former Henkel employee on stolen company stationery
for the purposes of defrauding the company. On 22 December, Henkel
announced that the dispute with the team had been resolved with a mutual
agreement and that legal action would not be pursued, though the team
would work with the German Prosecutor's Office to clarify the matter.
On
21 December, the team confirmed that Malaysian oil supplier Petronas
would join the team as title sponsor. From 2010 the team will compete
under the full title of Mercedes GP Petronas Formula One Team. According
to some reports, the arrangement is valued at €30m each year. Combined
with the €50m the team receives for winning the 2009 championship as
Brawn GP, Mercedes has a budget of €80m without actually having
dedicated anything to the budget themselves.
On
25 January 2010, the team's livery was publicly unveiled at the
Mercedes museum in Stuttgart, with Schumacher and Rosberg in attendance.
The car races in Mercedes' traditional silver colours and retains Brawn
GP sponsor MIGfx and adds investment group Aabar to its roster of
sponsors.
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