The
first win is the hardest, Lauda tells Bottas
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[May 01, 2017]
By Alan Baldwin
SOCHI, Russia (Reuters) - Valtteri
Bottas waited 81 races for his first Formula One win to come along
but it will get easier for the Finn after Sunday's success in
Russia, according to former world champion Niki Lauda.
"To win the first grand prix...is always the most difficult one,"
the retired triple champion and non-executive chairman of Bottas's
Mercedes team, told reporters.
"This I know out of my own experience. So every one that comes next,
for him his life is easier. He has proven that he can win.
"As soon as you win the first grand prix, a big load comes off,"
added the Austrian, who was surprised Ferrari did not win in Sochi
given their race pace and having both cars starting on the front
row.
Instead, Bottas roared past both Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen
to seize the lead into the first corner in a move that decided the
outcome.
The Finn has had to wait longer than most to scale the top step of
the podium but the man he replaced in January, retired 2016 world
champion Nico Rosberg, took his first victory in his 111th grand
prix start after also starting out at Williams.
Fellow-Finn Mika Hakkinen, world champion in 1998 and 1999 with
McLaren, took 96 races.
Only last week, reporters were asking Bottas about having to accept
so-called 'team orders' and help triple champion team mate Lewis
Hamilton in the title battle against Vettel but it looks different
already.
Bottas is now just 10 points adrift of Hamilton and, having started
the season as an emergency stopgap, can now quite legitimately see
himself in the championship mix.
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Winner and Mercedes Formula One driver Valtteri Bottas of Finland
holds the trophy on the podium. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
That situation poses another headache for Hamilton
but is one that Mercedes are relaxed about having to manage. They do
not expect the relationship to turn sour as it did between the
Briton and Rosberg.
"He (Bottas) took up that risky move to be Lewis Hamilton's team
mate, to take over the reigning world champion's car, and I think
that he has done a very good job," said team boss Toto Wolff.
"The relationship between the two is very intact, Lewis was one of
the first to congratulate Valtteri on his first race victory and I
think that shows the respect that they have towards each other.
"Nevertheless, both of them are fierce competitors and they will
want to win races and fight for a championship; But I don't think it
will affect the relationship and the dynamics within the team like
it did in the last years between Nico and Lewis."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Amlan Chakraborty) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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