Wolff praises Hamilton for ‘really admirable’ approach to 2022 setbacks – and makes Schumacher comparison

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff has heaped praise on Lewis Hamilton for the way he handled a challenging 2022 season, while comparing the Briton’s influence on the team to that of fellow seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher.
With Mercedes struggling to adapt to overhauled technical regulations, Hamilton spent the early part of the campaign carrying out set-up experiments and ultimately experienced the first win-less season of his 16-year F1 career to date.
Asked on F1's Beyond The Grid podcast how difficult 2022 was for Hamilton, Wolff said: “Extremely tough, because we have given him a tool that wasn’t capable of winning. On top of that, the drivers had a car that was unpredictable, unstable, good at times, not good at others – not really something you can work with and develop.
“But as a personality, how he has gone through the season is really admirable. There were times when the team felt down because of the non-performance and this is where he picked the people up and motivated them, and that is truly management and personality traits that I have not seen with a professional sportsman before.”

Wolff was then asked if he now sees Hamilton as part of the management at Mercedes, to which he replied: “I would say yes. Obviously there’s his involvement in developing the car, and his presence in the factory, but I think on the race weekends he has become such a senior figure.
“[He’s] maybe a little bit like Michael was back in the day, or I think about Tom Brady in [American] football teams, that you become more than just a player or just a driver. You are emotionally part of the team, and he definitely is.
HEAD-TO-HEAD: Which drivers came out on top in the battle of the 2022 team mates?
“He’s not, like we called them in the past, a contractor – drivers come, get paid and they leave for the next better occasion. He’s been with the team now 10 years [and] he’s a team member.”
Hamilton recently commented that he is targeting a new deal with Mercedes to take him beyond his existing contract through 2023, as the 37-year-old continues his quest for what would be a record-breaking eighth world title.
Next Up
Related Articles
Hamilton shares more about his special Ferrari documents
12 stats from a gripping 2025 season so far
Half Term Reports 2025How Sauber's 2025 season has played out so far
Stella surprised by level of McLaren's dominance in 2025
Which F1 races are still to come in 2025
See the drivers face Grill the Grid’s ‘What the track?!’ challenge