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‘I don’t care about second’: George Russell on targeting a first race victory and off-track fame hitting home

For a man whose irrepressible ambition and unique talent has taken him to the cusp of Formula 1’s summit, George Russell could be forgiven for thinking 2022 hasn’t quite matched his lofty expectations. Waiting in the wings – aching for three years at the back of the pack with Williams – the 24-year-old’s long-heralded spot in the Mercedes garage was, most assumed, the final step on the road to fulfilment. Grand Prix victories, and subsequent title pursuits, were surely a slam-dunk inevitability.

Yet the scale of the struggle at Mercedes this season, toiling with their car’s violent oscillations and unpredictability, sees the Brit widely praised for his steadiness behind the wheel. With six races to go Russell is postioned in fourth, 35 points ahead of his teammate Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc in second is just 16 points clear, as F1 heads to the humidity of Singapore for the first time in three years this weekend.

But despite the commendation, with seven podiums to his name and a top-five finish in every race bar one, race-by-race consistency is not the ultimate aim of the game.

“I don’t care about finishing second in the Championship, it’s not my goal,” Russell sternly tells The Independent, in his team’s Monza motorhome.

“We’re all here to win. You give me a choice between finishing fourth in the Championship and having a race win or two under my belt or finishing second with no wins, I’ll take fourth. That is now the position we’re in, we want to win a race.

“If I joined a year prior, I knew I would’ve had to come in and win because that’s what would’ve been expected. I’ve quite enjoyed the challenge of working with the team and trying to overcome problems and maximise every single occasion. Times like Budapest – that thrill and buzz was like nothing I’ve ever experienced before but was also because it was so unexpected.”

That pole position in Hungary back in July was Russell’s first in Formula One and stunned the whole paddock; not least his own team who had been at the track until midnight the preceding evening.

“Everyone had their head in their hands, confused,” he recalls. “So that pole was such a special moment which it made it all worth it. It’s definitely more rewarding, we’d been working so hard towards that.”

There is no let-up from Russell in his debut year for the Silver Arrows. Two rounds ago in Zandvoort, a decisive call to switch to soft tyres earned him his season-best result of second, notably to the detriment of Hamilton. Such a moment could have been labelled a strong statement of intent from Russell, making his Mercedes mark in spite of the seven-time world champion alongside him. Yet as he points out, this is a relationship forged not in nine months, but in five years.

“I was actually the young kid on the block in 2017 when I raced in Formula 3,” he explains. “When I was a reserve driver, I was in all the engineering meetings. I was going to the curry house every Saturday night with the Mercedes engineers, so those relationships have been built and almost didn’t need building.

“There’s trust and confidence between one another. If they turned around and said stay out, I wouldn’t have questioned it but equally if I switch tyres and even concede position, I know that’s what we need to do.”

Frankly, why shouldn’t Toto Wolff trust Russell’s instincts? His record speaks for itself. He won GP3 in 2017. A year later, he was Formula 2 champion. And even in a struggling Williams, his qualifying lap last year in damp conditions at Spa, earning him second, was one for the ages; and the final nail in Valtteri Bottas’s Mercedes coffin.

Yet for all the accolades on track – with the best surely yet to come – Russell’s adaptation to life firmly in the public eye away from the cockpit deserves equal acclaim. He details how he can no longer leave his flat in London without being recognised, hounded for an autograph. This interview, for instance, occurs hours after a 15-year-old boy started crying outside his Monza hotel following a selfie. That fame does not escape the attention of his family, too.

“My brother and sister are in their thirties, my brother has two kids and is living in Leeds,” he tells, with a glint in his eye.

“I’m treated like an uncle but I do have my five-year-old nephew going on my brother’s phone saying ‘hey Siri, who is George Russell’s nephew?!’ It’s quite funny seeing him trying to find himself on Google.

Russell has an excellent relationship with Toto Wolff and Lewis Hamilton

“I feel like we’re all in this together. We live and breathe it, my success is our success. If I have failures or disappointments, they all feel it.

“I’ve gone from a team at the bottom of the grid to a team at the top and to be honest I have noticed that [increase in fame]. It was quite a shock at first but it’s quite a special feeling and it’s incredible to see how much it means to these people.”

But what about using that fame for a greater purpose? Russell paints a pretty picture of his life regularly to his 3.8 million followers on Instagram yet carries himself with an aura of maturity and assuredness within that bubble. While Hamilton, 13 years his senior, uses his platform to promote issues close to his heart, Russell can foresee a time where he takes on a similar mantle. No rush, though.

When asked if he could see himself one day speaking out against social media abuse, something he has been a recipient of, he says: “I definitely want to be part of a positive change where needed in society and sport. But equally I do look in the mirror and think: I’m 24 years old and I have a lot to learn in this regard and with racing as well.

Russell’s adaptation to life in the public eye away from the cockpit deserves acclaim too

Xural.com

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