Humility is a super-important factor in all of our lives, and I try to remind myself every evening in front of the mirror, 'Just calm down.'
Toto Wolff
Emotions run high when you have a bad day; you can't hide it.
The downfall of any leader in a sport's team is when he gets carried away with his own ego.
By admitting a mistake, it is easier to get yourself out of a spiral.
We are always full of the types of people who retire or die. But they are never saying 'This guy is really unbelievable; we're alive to witness an exceptional performer.' I think we should recognise that while we are still racing.
We must be relentless and resilient.
You need the right balance between data and gut feeling.
Sometimes you are lucky, sometimes you're unlucky. It all weighs out at the end. That is my experience at least.
You cannot expect a driver who has just lost a shot at pole position to run around with a smile on his face. You need to accept that he is upset in a different way to how we are upset.
A restructuring of an organisation is always a difficult time and delicate.
I think, as a tire manufacturer, you need to deliver a product that, up to a certain specification, needs to hold the loads and the speed. But you want a tire which degrades in performance so the races are not boring, while at the same time, you want it to have peak performance. All together is a very difficult task.
We appreciate every rational and every true comment, and we take criticism very seriously.
People enjoy watching sports at the weekend and watching motor racing and whatever sports, and Formula One is the number one global platform which is competing regularly - not like the Olympic Games or the World Cup - so the macro case was this is something that we should be part of because it's going to grow, and it does.
You have seen in football that if you start to think you are the 'Special One,' or that you are better than the others, that is the moment when you will be beaten.
This is motor racing. We go at very high speeds, and tires have always been deflating or exploding. It is just part of the sport.
I live part of the time in Oxford, and I love it.
Brexit is a major concern for us, and it should be a major concern for all of us who live in the U.K. and operate out of the U.K.
I'm getting to enjoy the mentality of the British, the sarcasm, the dry humour. There are so many more ways of articulating yourself than in German.
If you come into Formula 1, and you try to eat each other or perform on the highest level, and equalisation is what you need after the first race, and you cry out after the first race, it's not how we've done things in the past and not how we've moaned.
F1 needs Ferrari much more than Ferrari needs F1.
Don't mess with Sergio Marchionne.
Winning races is very difficult - actually, it's not: you just have to qualify in front, and then it's much easier, from what we've analysed!
I've been involved in motorsports from the commercial point of view for many years with my involvement with DTM and managing other businesses, such as a rally business as well where we are collaborating with Red Bull.
It is important for a racing driver, for myself and for the team, that we can say that we trust each other, and it is not lightly said.
I was raised by my mother. My father died when I was 15. He was just 41.
Every team can have a shot at the title, and we're seeing all of them as a potential threat. There's absolutely no feeling of entitlement to be at the front.
We are all racers at heart, and what we want to see is out and out racing, and may the quickest man win.
I'm open-minded.
Marchionne has a clear vision of what F1 should represent for Ferrari, which is a purist sport that isn't a shopping channel. I would strongly encourage the sport's stakeholders not to provoke him.
The way we are getting parts and services is just in time, at the last minute, into the U.K., and any major disruption in borders and taxes would massively damage the Formula One industry in the U.K.
This is motor racing, and things can change pretty quickly.
If a no-deal Brexit would happen like has been discussed, I think we would have a major impact in terms of our operations going to the races and getting our cars developed and ready.
I'm always on the worrying side.
In terms of the sport itself, I think we need to stop talking ourselves down.
I was much too late when I found out about my passion for motor racing. I was 18.
The combination between the speed, personality, and being able to temper your emotions in both directions is a great ingredient.
We are pushing the limits on the chassis and the engine sides a lot in order to have a competitive car, and this is why we are winning races, but also, if you push the limits at a certain stage, you find them.
We have a strict radio protocol and structure how our decisions are made. This is how we've won so many races.