I read your original post about the strategy (just so many messages to sift through so I hadn't been able to react to it), but I do think while your reasoning is sound, you are basing your strategy with the benefit of hindsight. During the moment, Mercedes' strategy was perfectly fine. In fact, despite the first VSC, they were able to maintain a good gap to Max.jz11 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2021, 13:08I think the error was not to redflag it as soon as it happened, that, and that Mercedes played much too safe of a strategy considering their options, I looked a lot at the F1-tempo graphs of how Lewis car performed during quali and race (and Maxes car), and the last lap especially, I'd suggest you also look at it, I'm amazed how he could do what he did on nearly spent hards, talent, of course, but that car had plenty more to give not just in quali, but also in the first part of the race, and they chose not to use it, because it seemed they have it covered, Max was barely making a dent in the 17sec lead with new hards vs 25lap old ones, that tells a lot
Even what you state here (running conservatively), when you are on the lead like that at the end of the season with your car and its components having as much mileage as they would have running conservatively and just fast enough to maintain a gap is good. You minimize your risk, you ensure your machinery will make it to the end, and you give your opponent just enough hope to try to catch you and burn out their tires.
They were on route to win. They just got absolutely unlucky with Latifi's crash along with the absurd implementation of the SC towards the end.
If they knew Masi was going to do that with the SC, I guarantee you they would have stopped. If they knew what we knew now, they would have gone faster. But that's the benefit of hindsight.