GitanesBlondes wrote:Unfortunately it makes more strategic sense to simply maintain the gap as needed once it becomes obvious no one else has the pace to match it. We all know the tires being what they are, requires teams to figure out the best way to maximize the overall tire life each stint, while still maintaining a pace that doesn't cause them to go backwards. It comes down to simple risk/reward, and the smart play is not to take any unnecessarily stupid risks from a strategic standpoint.
First of all, it is my opinion that it is relevant in this topic to have some idea of the actual speed advantage that Red Bull has, since a very large speed advantage that has come very suddenly is more likely to be the result of some new system or device, as for example traction control. If Red Bull is performing more or less at the same level as usual, I think it is less likely that they are using TC or something else.
I agree that it makes sense to maintain the gap and looking after the tyres. But here I am considering Vettel's first laps while he built the gap. On these laps, Rosberg was much slower, so after 4 laps it looked like Vettel was superior. But then we saw that a laptime below 1:53 wasn't impossible for Rosberg to do, and he got quite close already on lap 5.
Let me just try to illustrate what I mean with an example. Let's assume that Vettel is capable of doing 1:52.5 and improving his laptime by 0.1 s for each lap for the first 6 laps if he doesn't think about tyre life beyond 6 laps. So he can do 1:52.5, 1:52.4, 1:52.3, 1:52.2, 1:52.1 and 1:52.0 on laps 1 to 6. But after 4 laps, he understands that Rosberg is already more than 7 seconds behind, so he doesn't do 1:52.1 on lap 5, he does 1:52.5 instead and keeps a similar pace after that to keep his tyres alive.
Let's further assume that Rosberg is running 1:55.0, 1:54.5, 1:54.0 1:53.5, 1:53.0, 1:52.5. Maybe he hasn't warmed his tyres properly on the warm-up lap or maybe he has a small flat spot or something like that, but the problem goes away gradually.
So what we observe (in this hypothetical case is then):
Lap 1: Vettel pulls away by 2.5 s
Lap 2: Vettel pulls away by 2.1 s
Lap 3: Vettel pulls away by 1.7 s
Lap 4: Vettel pulls away by 1.3 s
Lap 5: Vettel stops pushing
Lap 6: Rosberg is on the same pace as Vettel
Lap 7 -> : Rosberg and Vettel run on the similar pace and the gap increases with only one second during the next 10 laps. They both make their tyres last for a similar length of the stint.
Would you conclude here that Vettel was generally 2 seconds per lap faster than Rosberg, because he was pulling away with 2 seconds per lap at when he was pushing? Do you think the times prove that Vettel would be capable of going 2 seconds faster than Rosberg all the time?
I would say that Vettel's best lap while he was pushing to the maximum is 1:52.2, which shows his speed. Two laps later, Rosberg was only 0.3 s slower than this lap. Let's say that slightly smaller fuel load and improved track conditions is worth -0.4 s in lap time, but tyres worn for 2 laps more is worth +0.2 s in lap time. In that case, Rosberg has shown that he is capable of running only 0.5 s off Vettel's ultimate pace. Are these numbers unrealistic? Do the lap times usually improve much more than 0.1 s per lap?