Excellent post once again, Schuttelberg.
I didn't want to quote the entire post, so I'll just mark this bit here;
Schuttelberg wrote:I do agree with Phil that the Quali gap is a bit exaggerated. However, it's not just the W07' it's also down to him. I just feel that if Hamilton is switched on for the next six races, Rosberg will find it very difficult. Yet, if you ask someone like me who isn't so concerned who wins the title as much as Phil, if both Rosberg and Hamilton are 'switched on' the logical bet will always be Hamilton and this is no swipe or dig at Rosberg, it's a testament to Hamilton's talent. If Rosberg wins will he be a deserving WDC? If you beat Lewis Hamilton in the same team, even with some luck, you're something special!
I suppose Singapore is a track where any problem might be exaggerated. Braking is crucial in Singapore and many belief this is where Hamilton in the past has always been able to extract more and have an edge vs other drivers. The braking. This is perhaps the one area that hampered him most; in having to crucially manage the heat of the brakes and perhaps never quite getting the confidence over the duration of the weekend (the whole weekend was messy, just like Baku) it exaggerated the issue and the gap that we saw in the end.
Anyway, I pretty much agree that Hamilton can turn things around if he can recapture his form. My concern is that this may not be enough; You can perform at your absolute best for the entire weekend, much like he did in Monza, and then mess up the start and the race win is history. The starts may not be down entirely to luck, but I would suggest that once you move past the unpredictability of it, it will have a lot to do with confidence. And that confidence might just be lacking. For confidence, you need a certain amount of control and predictability... and this may just be something that will not happen given how much the clutch is dependent on temperature fluctuations and warm-up during the formation lap.
Who knows; Maybe it's solved now. Hamilton had a "reasonable" start, as did Rosberg in Singapore when we watch the top-3 (all except for Max), but then again, I think Singapore is probably less crucial as I think the straight is not all that long.
Anyway, good races coming up. Malaysia, Japan and CotA. 3 races Lewis usually goes well on. If he wants to win his 4th title, he will have to be sharp and faultless and walk away with 3 wins. The last 3 races are tricky; Historically, Brazil hasn't been his strongest of races, though the last two years have been quite close, especially 2014. Mexico is a bit of an unknown looking at last year and Abu Dhabi - well, it's known to be a Hamilton circuit, but Rosberg beat him to pole the last two years...
IMO - this WDC is going to be a close one.
Fun fact though; 6 race wins for either driver would yield a 42 point advantage/swing. Enough to dictate that either driver could still clinch the title before the last race. If Hamilton wins the next 5 races, he'll have at the very least a 26 point lead with 25 still open which would mean he is WDC. On the other hand, if Rosberg wins the next 4 races, he'll have a 37 point lead with 50 still up for grabs, but that would pretty much make him WDC unless he suffers two complete DNFs.