thomin wrote:komninosm wrote:thomin wrote:That first pit stop wouldn't have changed anything. Lewis wouldn't have gotten the undercut on the second stop, so if anything he could have fallen behind Bottas if Williams were to cover for Nico's second stop and thereby undercut Lewis. Granted, that's an unlikely scenario, but even so, the gap would have been comparable to what we ended up with.
Nico was just asked whether he was on the edge in that last lap and he replied that he wasn't at all. He was on the couple of laps before that where he fought to keep Lewis out of the DRS range, but he said that on that last lap, he knew that Lewis was in no position to overtake him, as there are only three corners to try and do so and Lewis wasn't close enough to give it a go.
You're imagining things if you think Williams could keep up with Mercedes once they go ahead (Rosberg was toying with Perez to keep his DRS and give DRS to Williams so Hamilton could not pass them.)
What would happen if Hamilton had a better first pitstop is he would come out ahead of Bottas and start pressuring Rosberg right from there. After Perez got out of the way Rosberg would have no DRS and Hamilton would wear him down.
What Nico actually said was that in the last lap his tires started becoming quite a bit less efficient, but he wasn't worried because there were only 3 turns and Hamilton could not pass him. He did not say he was not on the edge. In fact if Hamilton had pressured him a lot longer (if he had a better first pitstop as above) it's reasonable to assume Rosberg would have used up his tires a lot more and maybe even made more mistakes in the end and got passed. He already made a big mistake once in the race and got off track. If Hamilton was behind him in such a mistake he would overtake for sure.
This is how an unbiased analysis is made.
I explicitly called it an unlikely scenario, so I don't understand you focusing on that.
However, you're too quick in dismissing Perez. He set the pace for Rosberg and Bottas and Hamilton couldn't pass either of them, so what makes you think he could have passed Perez? Or Rosberg for that matter?
But even if Lewis could have put more pressure on Nico than Bottas did (big if) during their second stint, I don't see how that would have changed anything. At best there would have been an outside chance but given the performances over the year so far, I just don't see it. We have seen both drivers pressure one another at various stages and so far we haven't seen one successful overtaking maneuver.
I mean the third stint is the best indicator. Nico managed the gap and kept it above 1s until the very last lap. Why would the second stint have been any different?
So many problems with your logic.
Williams did not try an early pitstop because they rightly feared that the harder tire would be slow to warm up and Mercedes would stay out and pass them. The only thing Williams could do was to pit at the exact same lap, but there's 2 Mercedes cars to cover. The cleverer strategy would be to stay out and gamble that Mercedes hits traffic while you come out ahead of Perez, but that failed. But at least that way you secure your 3rd+4th place so it's the safe bet.
I already explained to you why Rosberg didn't try to pass Perez early, he wanted DRS for himself, and a DRS train to keep Hamilton from overtaking anyone. If there was no Perez and Rosberg went out of Bottas's DRS then Hamilton would have a chance to pass him.
There's no "big if" to whether Hamilton could put more pressure than Bottas, there's only a tiny one and evidence points that it would be true. Mercedes are faster. Rosberg was managing the gap at 2 seconds. No DRS and still some dirty air. When he made a mistake and Bottas came INSIDE DRS range, Rosberg "magically" got away again.
The third stint is not the best indicator, because Hamilton used up a lot of his car's potential behind Bottas which otherwise he would have put to good use pressuring Rosberg. Also at the second stint he would have come out directly in Rosberg's DRS zone and not 2 seconds behind and having to use up the car to catch up. He could instead use the DRS to post same laps as Rosberg while using less of his car. And attack near the end.
Also I seem to remember an early race this year where they overtook each other several times. Also I didn't say Hamilton would pass him for sure. I only said he would pass if Rosberg made a mistake.
You twist my words like you twisted Rosbergs. Stick to the facts next time.