evered7 wrote:The only two drivers to attempt a two stop strategy were the Lotus drivers. Others went for three or worse four pitstops. Kimi drove 51 laps on those tires. No matter how good you are able to nurse a tire, there will be an end point for it.
The fact is that Kimi pitted 6 laps earlier than Grosjean to take the medium tires and considering that he was only again pitted before the final couple of laps, I take it that if he was asked to do lesser number of laps in the medium, he would have been better off.
I wasn't sure if the person in question was the one deciding these, hence the question. Didn't accuse him of doing it outright.
This is going in circles with 2 wrong assumptions: 1. that a driver is not to blame for anything, never, ever and 2. 6 laps decided something. So one more time to end this off topic: strategy was not wrong, other driver managed that. 6 laps are not important, 1. stints are connected (example: later stop = lost time on softs = more pace required from mediums = bigger deg), 2. you can find exactly the same distance after the pitstop (adjusted) and you will find that one driver had pace and the other did not. (I'm guessing but I'm not checking if they had the same tyres
).
Now, even if it was a bad strategy, even if said person was responsible that's not how you judge someone's qualifications - based on one race. I also stand by my uninformed assumption that head of strategy is the one crunching numbers, preparing scenarios based on FP times, track conditions etc. and not calling pitstops directly. Safe bet it was Allison's decision to hire him, also a bit sad that draining of Lotus by Ferrari continues.