basti313 wrote:If you start bullying like that you should at least explain your point.
For me point 1 is not clear.
Point 2 is very clear, Hamilton clearly pushed Rosberg off the track in turn 1. Remember Vettel/Alonso in Monza? Without big tarmac runoffs this would have ended in a big dust cloud and a drive-through.
Point 3 is also very clear. There was just 0.3sec pace difference between hard and soft between lap 24 and 34. Later there was no real difference. And 0.3sec is normally not enough to overtake.
Point 4...well...I would not read anything into the radio. Rosberg was just too nice as he allowed Hamilton to push him easily off the track in two further attempts. Just driving away is just not enough there, a bit of wheel banging would not have been too much.
Some minor points, but:
There was more 0.3sec pace difference alone by the fact that Rosberg was well within the DRS zone. He was already practically ahead in the first stint and before the 1st stop - I'm still amazed how well Hamilton defended in the last 10 laps while on the slower tyre. I'd also argue that there's no way to know for sure how big the speed differential between softs and mediums were on that last stint, because Rosberg was somewhat limited in pace by Hamilton (and dirty air). If Rosberg had gotten ahead, we would have seen him disappear into the distance, yet because he couldn't pull off the move, we can only speculate on how much quicker the tyre might have been.
I also don't think Rosberg was in any way nice. He tried the moves and if it were not for Hamilton being as agressive as he was, he would have pulled them off. At this point, beyond trying a different strategy/overtake, I don't know what Rosberg could have done differently if not to cause a crash. Him being the overtaker and behind, I also think the onus is on him more so to take avoiding action if the car in front does not wave you through. Hamilton defended hard, no doubt, but Rosberg always knew the door was going to close on corner exit. His aim was to effectively carry more speed (higher speed differential) and get into Hamiltons view before he closed the door, but never quite got that far - or hope, Hamilton might yield. Given that the cars are committed to a corner at a certain point, you don't want to be on the outside on corner exit, unless you are either 1.) well alongside and 2.) carrying a higher speed differential (e.g. "I'm coming through").
As for strategy change: I don't think Rosberg was shafted or at a huge disadvantage by going onto the medium tyre on his 2nd stint. In hindsight, if there hadn't been a safety car, I'm pretty confident he wouldn't have cought Hamilton (and passed him), but I'm not sure he would have faired any better by staying on his tail. When Hamilton remained in first position and therefore got pit priority - it was clear the gap was going to increase slightly. When Rosberg rejoined the track after his pitstop, I think there was a gap of 5+ seconds and due to his medium tyre, that gap further increased. By going on the medium tyre, he was safe in regards to any potential safety-car (which ironically is just what happened), but by going on an alternative strategy also gave him the opportunity to beat his team-mate on strategy. If he had gone OOP like Hamilton, he was always going to remain behind him, on equal tyres, equal terms. Going OPO gave him potential advantage for a safety-car situation and if it had worked out, might have given a higher advantage at the end, assuming he would have caught him and tyre-wear would have proven to be worse.
It's always easy to analyse in hindsight, but I genuinely believe from Rosbergs point of view, it was the right strategy call and between two bad calls, the lesser of two evils.