At the end of the day, all drivers are human beings and make mistakes - including Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton. No single driver will ever be perfect, but the real challenge is to minimise mistakes as much as possible - at least the costly ones. Hamilton's mistake in quaifying was more costly than Rosberg's mistakes combined this weekend, as reflected in the outcome of the race.Shrieker wrote:One thing no one has mentioned so far (as far as I've seen) is Rosberg again making a mistake in the race, which could've been very crucial. When Bottas was on his tail in the second stint, Nico overcooked the first turn and went wide over the sausage kerb. Thankfully for him, Bottas was sleeping on the job and couldn't really capitalize on that mistake apart from harassing him a bit.
Imho this shows that when pushed, Nico makes the odd mistake. It was the same in Canada when Hamilton was chasing him (if there wasn't anything wrong with Nico's brakes, that is).
At this point it depends on which side of the fence you are sitting on. You can believe that...
a) Hamilton is incredibly unlucky again / Rosberg is incredibly lucky again
b) Rosberg has an ability to avoid costly mistakes
c) a combination of the above.