Juzh wrote:Hamilton was 27s behind vettel moments before SC and had tons of cars in front on soft tires.
Don't let the times fool you, as there was so much of debris on the track that the gaps radically increased right when Hamilton came out the pits. He was essentially a pitstop behind Vettel plus 3 seconds.
I have the race open at exactly the moment when the crash happened and the gap from Vettel to Rosberg was 3.764 seconds and that increased to over 7 seconds within the next few seconds, not because Vettel was pulling away, but because the debris on the track (just as the safety car was deployed) meant that cars avoided it, some better, some faster, some slower.
So on lap 16 before Hamilton pitted, he was just overtaken by Vettel on better tires, then moments later, he dived into the pits with Rosberg just behind. So for all intends and purpose, Hamilton was exactly behind by 1 pitstop. On lap 17, assuming no safety car, the 'real order' at that point would have been:
1. Vet (SS) -> 3.7s -> 2. Ros (S) -> 11s -> 3. Kimi (SS?), 4. Ves (S), 5. Sai (S), 6. Ham (M)
Gap Vet to Ros, the 3.7s, Ros to Ham, exactly 1 pitstop.
Also good to note, Kimi was 10 seconds ahead of Vettel when he pitted, after he came out, he was 14.7 seconds behind Vettel. I am assuming a pitstop in Melbourne is roughly 25 seconds?
Fact is, with or without the safety car, Hamilton wasn't that far off Vettel at that point. As you said, 27-30 seconds give or take with at least both Torro Rossos between them. The safety car didn't change that. The only difference that safety car and red-flag made was that Rosberg changed his tires for free. The gaps that were there, yes, were decreased, but not by that much.
Case in point, lap 32 (14 later) when Sainz went into the pits and released Hamilton into clean air, the gaps were:
1.) Vet -> 2.7s -> 2.) Ros -> 11.4s -> 3.) Ric -> 16s -> 4.) Ves -> 19s -> 5.) Ham
So Ham was 19s off the lead, 16.5s off Rosberg. In other words, this means that being behind the Torro Rossos for 14 laps meant that he lost about 16.5 seconds relative to Rosberg as a result of not getting past them.
So back to the no-alonso-crash-scenario - if the gap was roughly a pitstop before the crash to Rosberg, having those two cars in between would have meant 1 pitstop behind Rosberg plus those 16.5 seconds. So roughly 40 seconds? But Rosberg would have needed to pit, so we can extract that 25 seconds and it would have been a real gap of 15 seconds somewhere between lap 32 and 40 (whenever Rosberg would have pitted for his last stint).
Compare that to the situation we had with the safety-car and the 16.5 seconds off of Rosberg he was (lap 32) without Rosberg needing to pit and I conclude the safety-car/red-flag made little difference in Hamiltons race. At worst, he would have been 3rd assuming Kimi would have had his fault anyway, but IMO the above numbers suggest there is a probability Ham could have beaten him under the circumstance that he was not going to stop anymore.
This to me only underlines the pace of that Mercedes and their strategic genius going onto the medium compound. Without the red-flag, Hamilton could have been on a winner with his medium tires. Without the safety-car, no, Hamilton wouldn't have won, but he wouldn't have been that far off either. So no, he wasn't that lucky. When you start off pole and then lose 5 positions, it's not a question of "luck" but one of damage limitation.