Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff has opened the door to implementing team orders after Lewis Hamilton handed his former team a painful lesson at the 2025 Spanish Grand Prix. The Ferrari driver stormed to victory at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on Sunday, becoming the first non-Mercedes driver to win a race this season — and now Mercedes team orders are firmly on the agenda.
Mercedes Team Orders: What Wolff Said After Barcelona
Hamilton seized the lead through a clever alternative tyre strategy, then capitalised brilliantly on a well-timed Virtual Safety Car to complete his third pit stop without surrendering position. From there, his superior race pace did the talking. George Russell and Kimi Antonelli spent crucial laps scrapping with each other, with Antonelli eventually passing Russell for second before a power unit failure ended the young Italian’s afternoon prematurely.
Wolff was candid about the cost of letting his drivers race freely. “Today, we tried to race fair in the team game but maybe it has cost us the win today,” he told Sky Sports. “They raced each other quite hard before George’s stop and I think we lost about four or five or six seconds to Lewis, and then obviously with the VSC it changed the order.”
Crucially, however, Wolff made clear that any future intervention would come through dialogue rather than diktat. “It’s a situation we need to look into for the future with both drivers how to handle a situation where there’s a pace differential,” he said. “Always totally transparent to the best interest of the team.”
Hamilton’s Title Charge Forces Mercedes to Recalibrate
Beyond the tactical debate, Sunday’s result carries serious championship implications. Hamilton now sits 41 points behind Antonelli in the drivers’ standings and nine points ahead of Russell — meaning the 2025 title fight has a very dangerous third voice. As a result, Wolff acknowledged that Mercedes must rethink its approach entirely.
“There is a third party now getting involved in the championship fight — constructors’ and drivers’,” Wolff admitted. “We will discuss internally how we want to handle the situation where we risk holding each other up. It’s not going to be a problem, it’s just maybe we need to recalibrate.”
For Wolff, the praise for his drivers remained genuine despite the defeat. He highlighted Russell’s blistering opening stint — “it looked like everybody was standing still behind him” — while conceding that Antonelli held the pace advantage across the latter two stints. The talent is clearly there on both sides of the garage. The question now is whether Mercedes can align it into a unified strategy before Hamilton and Ferrari make that conversation irrelevant.
One thing is certain: this season just got a whole lot more complicated for the Silver Arrows.