Reasons don't enter into it: Rosberg was on Options on their 9th lap when his followers, all on Primes, passed him with incredible ease. Doesn't matter if it was strategy, luck, or act of god: He was on Options, other weren't, he was passed. Vettel was the faster car all weekend, but the Prime-tyred Kubica closed in on him with amazing ease while the former struggled with worn Options.ISLAMATRON wrote:Rosberg did not lose out because he had the options on at the end, he lost out because his strategy caused him to run them for way too long at the end... he would have been equally proper --- if he ran them for too long in the first stint like Ferrari did.
Kubica did nothing special, he lucked out with the safety car and his team just didnt make bonehead strategy decisions like Vettle/Red Bull and Rosberg/Williams did.
Hoping for a safety car is not a strategy, it is just that a hope... Just like efrrari was hoping for rain when they put the rain tires on KIMI.
Jenson had the safist and most optimal strategy for Austrailia, and guess what he won... bacause Charlie didnt mash the SC button until after Button pitted.... hmmm maybe thats why they call it a button.
And I agree that Kubica did nothing special, and that it was luck (or strategy that depended on the safety-car - which is a gamble) - but that doesn't mean his result didn't show something: If you fulfill your obligation to run the worse tyre early on, you will have your car at it's best pace near the end, with the question remaining: Will that pace be enough to repay for the lost time at the start. In this case, it was - and teams will want to be in that same position again, too.