ISLAMATRON wrote:You cant be "faster than your pace suggests" its all in lap times. Kubica was normal for the BMW & Vettle was slower than he should have been because of terrivle strategy... Jenson got it just right.
Over a race-distance, you can end up in a position higher than you would earn by pace alone. That's a point nobody can argue with, because it's true.
Kubica, overall, wasn't fast enough to come near the Red Bull, no matter it's strategy. It was a safety-car that wiped all of Vettel and Brawn's advantages. At that time, Kubica had a far superior tyre - and that's how he passed Nico, Rubens and almost passed Sebastian, even though they were all faster cars, both over a single lap and both over the whole distance, hadn't it been for a safety car. You yourself said:
ISLAMATRON wrote:The BMW was not fast enuff to qualify as high as it did but Kubica was extra light, that type of strategy never wins.
And yet it was charging hard for 2nd place, with the leader not too far off - perhaps not catchable, but definitely not as far ahead as he was before.
That was due to strategy alone: That same strategy I suggested would make sense - using up the "bad" tyres first, and then hope a safety-car brings you back to the pack. And you yourself suggested Red Bull should've done that on Vettel - and yes, without disintegrating tyres at the end, who knows? Vettel on the Prime was faster than Button on the Options. Kubica on the primes was equal or faster than Button on the Options.
Rosberg got --- over by the whole midfield because he had the Options at the end, while his competitors had primes..