no because the people around him also had to do a full lap with the delta time so he was finerayden wrote:So did button lose out by pitting straight away?
no because the people around him also had to do a full lap with the delta time so he was finerayden wrote:So did button lose out by pitting straight away?
LH did make comparison about race strategist at Merc vs Mclaren. At Mclaren, I think he mention the team have 1 dedicated race strategist for himself, while Merc has got 1 race strategist for both drivers.iotar__ wrote:Not Hamilton gain. Strategy talk in Monaco on a one-stopper with safety car and two team mates is short. Leading driver pits first, anything else is a sabotage against him.
The thing that bothers me is I think LH can't be that detached from reality to expect anything else, if it was emotional, fine but the fact that he kept talking on and on makes me think it was calculated whining to create media controversy and picture himself as a driver disadvantaged by a team which is of course ridiculous. Prepared strategy to stir controversy out of nothing. It was Rosberg who had more reasons to talk about strategy after Spain. McLaren in 2007 must have been a nice place for a second driver.
As Lauda said, the lead driver has the first pit stop, everyone knows this, Lewis didnt have the option to stop frist. Really thats the end of it. Lewis can whine away all he wants, those are the team rules.MercedesAMGSpy wrote:Oh guys you are so smart, analysing everything in hindsight. I understand his questions, it was his only chance to try something to pass Rosberg. Now they did nothing and he couldn't do anything.Rodzilla wrote:trust me he doesnt understand the situation, even after the race he was going on about it and he probably still feels the team kept him downGaz. wrote:"In conclusion lewis isnt smart and should leave the tactics to others"
Well I guess that's the difference between a spur of the moment call that has to be decided in 20 seconds max, and having a full day to come up with a counter argument that it was better to stay out after all.
a professional driver should know that an undercut wouldnt work if he has to drive slowly on his outlap lol, hopefully someone from the team explains it to him
The way I read it was slightly different. It sounds like the first driver pits first no matter what, that's slightly different, than first call. Basically pit stops can't happen till the first driver wants to pit.richard_leeds wrote:As I see it, Merc follow the tradition of the leading diver having first call on pit stops. Hamilton has benefited from that to land 4 race wins. This time it was the other way around.
In addition, it appears that stopping before the SC would have disadvantaged him anyway.
So on both counts the right scenario was followed.
While this is how it has been relayed though the media, it doesn't make much sense. I interpret it as the driver in front having first rights. So if the driver in the back wants to stop, the other half of the garage gets the chance to pit first if they want to.dans79 wrote:The way I read it was slightly different. It sounds like the first driver pits first no matter what, that's slightly different, than first call. Basically pit stops can't happen till the first driver wants to pit.richard_leeds wrote:As I see it, Merc follow the tradition of the leading diver having first call on pit stops. Hamilton has benefited from that to land 4 race wins. This time it was the other way around.
In addition, it appears that stopping before the SC would have disadvantaged him anyway.
So on both counts the right scenario was followed.
elf341 wrote:The intersting thing for me is whether when running 2nd in the future, Lewis will come in the pit when *he* pleases.
Toto Wolff was questioned about this post monoco, and he seemed to imply that if Lewis did that they would not service the car, since it is the team that decides these calls not the driver. Obviously this choice would be damage the team in terms of points, so perhaps Lewis will bet that they change his tires anyway.
Source?elf341 wrote: Toto Wolff was questioned about this post monoco, and he seemed to imply that if Lewis did that they would not service the car,
That's a good point. I think we are however missing something. From my impression, it wasn't necessarely about "winning the race by doing an undercut" - in fact, I personally think the undercut was non-existant at Monaco, hence why I'm disappointed the safety car ruined what could possibly been a chance for Lewis to get ahead under normal pitting circumstances - but because he wanted to avoid the scenario he had last year when the safety car made him lose places to Redbull by losing time in the pits.hollus wrote:Nice analysis using times and logic, guys.
But aren't we getting answers to the wrong question, especially Lewis? Either he is willing to follow the team's wishes or he isn't. If he is, they called to give Rosberg (the driver ahead) priority, which probably reflects rules of engagement accepted by all parties involved.
If he is not willing to follow the team's wishes, then he was behind in track, meaning that he had the chance to physically duck in to the pits after Rosberg had passed them. In that case (and with all the time he imagines gaining), the mechanics would have gotten tires ready for him, which even if cold, would do fine once the safety car was out. And (with the time gain he is imagining) he would likely have won the race. And he would have had 2007 all over again.
So Hamilton is asking whether he could have won the race. I think he should be asking whether he wanted to win the race like this. Because if pitting had been the right call, then the team would have wanted it to make the right call, but for Rosberg.
+1 finally someone else understood what I was saying previously in the threadPhil wrote:That's a good point. I think we are however missing something. From my impression, it wasn't necessarely about "winning the race by doing an undercut" - in fact, I personally think the undercut was non-existant at Monaco, hence why I'm disappointed the safety car ruined what could possibly been a chance for Lewis to get ahead under normal pitting circumstances - but because he wanted to avoid the scenario he had last year when the safety car made him lose places to Redbull by losing time in the pits.hollus wrote:Nice analysis using times and logic, guys.
But aren't we getting answers to the wrong question, especially Lewis? Either he is willing to follow the team's wishes or he isn't. If he is, they called to give Rosberg (the driver ahead) priority, which probably reflects rules of engagement accepted by all parties involved.
If he is not willing to follow the team's wishes, then he was behind in track, meaning that he had the chance to physically duck in to the pits after Rosberg had passed them. In that case (and with all the time he imagines gaining), the mechanics would have gotten tires ready for him, which even if cold, would do fine once the safety car was out. And (with the time gain he is imagining) he would likely have won the race. And he would have had 2007 all over again.
So Hamilton is asking whether he could have won the race. I think he should be asking whether he wanted to win the race like this. Because if pitting had been the right call, then the team would have wanted it to make the right call, but for Rosberg.
I think the logic was - "guys, there was an accident - is Nico pitting? If he isn't, bring me in now.". I don't think he was trying to get an first pit over Nico, but wanted to avoid doing an extra lap and then lose time behind his team-mate in the pits. Luckily, the gap between him and Raikkoennen was so big, that even despite the holdup, he didn't lose position. At the same time, he probably was left wondering why Nico didn't pit at the first instance and why the team didn't allow him pitting instead. In hindsight, as the analysis shows, he would have been worse off indeed, so I guess it's a non-issue in the end.
siskue2005 wrote:Many of you are immediately ready to bash Lewis, just understand what happened
He said he knew there will be a safety car for that crash as they both passed the crashed car....Lewis wanted to pit immediately but they couldn't do it coz Nico gets choice as he is leading
All he is implying is Nico or team didn't call to come into pits immediately as the second time they all stacked up and could have lost lewis second place to Ricardo ...which was pretty much the risk In stacking up (similar to what happened to Schumacher at turkey 2006)