By Abhishek Takle
LONDON - Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff has no doubt Lewis Hamilton will sign a contract extension keeping him at Formula One champions Mercedes, saying the two parties had until the start of testing next year to get the deal done.
The 35-year-old Hamilton, who wrapped up a record-equalling seventh world championship title this season and became the most successful driver in F1 history, is out of contract at the end of this year.
Questions about a contract extension have dogged Wolff and Hamilton all season, with the Mercedes seat the only one on the F1 grid yet to be officially filled.
“If you refer to why haven’t we got a signed contract, the reason is simple - we always prioritised about getting this championship done and not being distracted by sometimes difficult discussions..." Wolff, who led Mercedes to a record seventh straight title double this year, said on Friday.
💬 "It’s beyond my wildest dreams, to think I now stand here as a seven-time World Champion. I couldn’t have done it without such an incredible group of people behind me." - @LewisHamilton 🏆![CDATA[]]>💜 pic.twitter.com/4SSwxwQvYb
— Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team (@MercedesAMGF1) December 18, 2020
“But then Covid struck. It has delayed us a little bit but we are not worried in eventually getting it done. Sooner or later it needs to be done, the latest before we go testing."
Wolff was speaking after Mercedes earlier on Friday announced plans for petrochemical giant Ineos to acquire one-third of its Formula One team, sharing equal ownership with parent company Daimler AG and the Austrian.
As part of the deal, it was announced the 48-year-old Wolff, who has also faced questions about his future, will stay on in his role as chief executive and team principal for another three years.
Hamilton, who enjoys a close rapport with Wolff, hailed the development and said he would open talks with him over the next few days.
The Briton, who earns an estimated 40 million pounds ($54.02 million) a year, had planned to step up talks concerning his new deal over F1’s Middle Eastern triple header, but tested positive for COVID-19 and was forced to miss a race.
"We haven’t started a conversation," Hamilton, who returned for the Abu Dhabi season finale last Sunday, said in a virtual media conference ahead of the governing FIA’s annual prize giving ceremony. “Toto and I plan to do that over the coming days.”
F1 testing is set to take place at the beginning of March next year, with the season-opening Australian Grand Prix scheduled for later the same month.
($1 = 0.7405 pounds) (Reporting by Abhishek Takle; editing by Ken Ferris)