Rosberg believes he has psychological edge over Lewis Hamilton

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  • Confident: Rosberg has a 22-point advantage in the drivers’ standings.

    Nico Rosberg feels he now has the psychological edge over Lewis Hamilton after putting daylight between himself and the Brit in this season’s Formula One title race.

    In a championship game of swings and roundabouts between the Mercedes team-mates, Hamilton’s burst of four consecutive wins after Rosberg’s triumph in the season opener in Australia, allowed him to finally edge ahead in the drivers’ standings.

    But events over the last two grands prix in Monaco and Canada have conspired against Hamilton, leaving Rosberg to open up a 22-point cushion going into this weekend’s return to Austria after an 11-year absence.

    With Rosberg now in the ascendancy, the 28-year-old German said: “If your team-mate has three or four wins in a row that’s obviously going to strengthen his position.

    “It was really important to bring that run to an end because psychology is a big part of sports.

    “If you have those results behind you, like I do now, it gives you that little bit extra, that little bit of an edge, so it does help. It’s important.”

    Rosberg can also count on lady luck being on his side in Canada after both he and Hamilton suffered identical issues with one of the car’s two energy recovery systems.

    Whereas Hamilton was forced to retire, Rosberg managed to nurse his car before claiming second place behind debut race-winner Daniel Ricciardo in his Red Bull.

    Rosberg added: “In hindsight it was damage limitation in Canada, coming second, lots of points.

    “For the team it sucked because our ambition is to do much better. With reliability problems like that, it’s not good. We need to be bulletproof. It’s a work in progress. We’ve been good with reliability, but we have had a few problems now, so we have to make sure it’s 100 per cent.”

    The issues in Canada ended Mercedes’ run of six consecutive victories and five successive one-twos, as well as talk of a team going through an entire season unbeaten for the first time in F1 history.

    “That’s not good,” said Rosberg. “It sucks because our car is fast enough to win every race, so coming away from Canada without the win was a big disappointment.

    “We need to bounce back in Austria and finish one-two in every race given the car we have.”

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