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George RussellĀ is a man in the midst of a transformation. When the fresh-facedĀ Formula OneĀ driver first arrived at the Mercedes-AMG Petronas headquarters in 2022, his role was well defined. Sharing the garage with none other than Lewis Hamiltonāthe seven-time Driversā Champion, considered by many the greatest driver in the history of the sportāRussellās duty was to support Lewis in every way imaginable, while simultaneously ensuring he racked up points for the team along the way. His success out of the gate was remarkable, scoring a pole position in Hungary and even winning his first Grand Prix in SĆ£o Paulo in his inaugural season with Mercedes. At its completion, Russell finished an impressive fourth in the World Driversā Championship.
Now, just a scant three years later, the prodigious English driver commands the driversā room. When Hamilton shocked the motorsport world by leaving AMG for rival Ferrari, Russell graduated from cub to alpha lion, looked upon to lead his storied team once again to glory. While the McLaren duo ofĀ Lando NorrisĀ and Oscar Piastri dominated the 2025 season, Russell kept his team competitive in nearly every raceāreaching the podium 9 times and claiming the checkered flag in Montreal and Singapore. The extremely quick, balanced and cerebral driver ended the season fourth in the standings in a thrilling season that came down to the last race.
We caught up with Russell just before the Dutch Grand Prix to find out how heās tackling these newfound alpha responsibilities, his hopes for next season, and if heās noticed the growing global support for his on-track grit.
When you first entered the Mercedes-AMG Petronas garage you were driving under Lewis Hamilton. And now, as you enter your prime, here comes a promising but inexperienced driver to learn under you. How have you processed this evolution?
When I came into Mercedes, I had three years under my belt [at Williams Racing], but I was new to the team, and I wanted to use my ears more than my mouth, if you know what I mean. I wanted to sort of soak in all the information and see how Lewis does his business, because itās clearly worked for so long. And over time I became more confident, and the team was giving me an equal voice within. So naturally, when Lewis moved on to Ferrari, and with Kimi [Antonelli] joining the team being naturally so young, it was just a natural transition. Weāre in this process now of trying to rebuild the team to get back to winning ways.
Some people are very quiet and like to remain in the background, while others prefer to grab the reins of leadership. How have you enjoyed this post-Lewis role?
I recognize our job as drivers is far more than just driving the car on a Sunday. We have to help direct the team with development, giving our feedback, what weāre feeling from the race car. Weāve got to lift the team up through times of struggle. Weāve got to keep on pushing the two-and-a-half-thousand people who work for the team. So, you recognize that if you can tick all of these boxes and get all of the troops behind, pushing in the same direction, ultimately it is only going to benefit yourself. And drivers are notoriously quite selfish individuals.
I want to win, but I need everybody within the team to bring their A game, as well as myself, to get that opportunity. And I think when you hold yourself to such a high standard, you know that puts pressures on your co-workers. And when they push themselves to such high standards as well, and you see them operating at the best of their ability, that puts the pressure back on you to ensure youāre maintaining that level. So it goes both ways, and Iāve sort of enjoyed this season. But of course, Formula One is a challenging sport, and to find yourself in the right path to success itās like turning an oil tanker, you know. And if youāre pointing slightly in the wrong direction, to get that oil tanker lined up and on the right track to success isnāt a matter of overnight work. Itās a matter of everybody contributing, and thatās what weāre working towards.
One thing that fascinates me about F1 drivers is how you psychologically handle a season when you know youāre probably not going to win the championship. How do you look forward to a race when you know itās going be very, very difficult to win? Do you ever consider it a lost season?
I think drivers who treat a season when theyāre not winning as a lost season lose their chance when the opportunity does come. So, Iām treating every single race I go to as if this is going to be the race that weāre going to win, and I need to bring absolutely everything to it. And I know my opportunity will come. I donāt know if that will be next year, in two years, five years, or 10 years, but I need to keep performing at the highest level of my ability to then be ready for that moment.
And you look at it with the McLaren guys just two years ago, they were the slowest team on the grid. Nobody would have predicted they would be winning the championship in two yearsā time, and if they gave up in that moment and just said, āThis is a lost season,ā they probably wouldnāt be winning a championship now. As I said, weāre all these troops, and weāve got to keep on pushing, pushing that oil tanker to be pointing in the right direction.















