I'd personally love to see it, I picture Totto going through all kind of facial contortions on the pit wall.turbof1 wrote:He is partially trolling, and partially hoping Hamilton does that so his drivers can get pass both the Mercedes'.dans79 wrote:Horner now weighing in on how his team can prevent Nico from becoming WDC.
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/127233
Indeed so. If I was a betting man, I'd bet on Hamilton getting pole. As to who leads at the end of the first lap? That's a bit trickier.Shrieker wrote:Everyone's assuming Lewis will be ahead. Who's to say Nico won't get pole and disappear into the distance.. Lewis needs to get the job done on Saturday and get a good start on Sunday if he's even to stand a chance.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but a mistake in the factory months before Japan caused Lewis to fail to win?Just_a_fan wrote:There is an interesting point, however, in that if Hamilton is in front after the last pits stops, backing Nico in to the opposition and winning the title would be a "racer's drive" and probably well applauded by most. Of course, all Nico would do is chuck an overtake up the inside and let Hamilton choose what to do. If they crash out, Rosberg wins the title. If they don't, he's probably still going to win the title unless he's very unlucky.
The reality is that Hamilton's only real hope is a technical fault on Nico's car. I think Lewis will just try for the win and just let whatever happens, happen. At least he'll go in to the off season with a good string of wins and the knowledge (in his own mind and Nico's) that only reliability scuppered him. He didn't lose the title and Nico didn't take it from him. A mistake in a factory many months before decided the 2016 title.
S'funny, but lots of people hark on about the good old days and here we are reliving them (without the death and serious injury). Historically, titles were won by guys with reliable cars. It wasn't always the best driver but it was almost always the most reliable car.
Uh-oh, you've just opened the Pandora's box with that post.SR71 wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong, but a mistake in the factory months before Japan caused Lewis to fail to win?
A mistake at the factory caused Lewis to hit the wall in Baku?
A mistake in the factory caused Spain?
Rosberg has won on merit many times this season and Lewis has enough errors and own goals that he's equally responsible for his points position.
Championships aren't decided in one race or one failure this year included.
Any component that fails due to a design mistake, would obviously fall in that bracket. How did those ERS failures occured otherwise? A Failure in Malaysia, that was attributed to a "Big end bearring" on an ICE that had barely completed 618 kms. Isn't that a design/quality issue, which obviously would have been done months ago.SR71 wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong, but a mistake in the factory months before Japan caused Lewis to fail to win?
Reality check. Lewis was quite a lot faster on Friday and the engine mapping changes done overnight with whatever changes they did to Setup and breaks, started hurting him from FP3 itself.SR71 wrote:A mistake at the factory caused Lewis to hit the wall in Baku?
So, it wasn't entirely driver's fault to blame for messy qualifying he had. He did accepted that the setup was wrong, but he couldn't adjust to it.[color=#0000FF]Toto Wolf on 20 Jun, 2016 -> [url=http://www.espn.in/f1/story/_/id/16339936/mercedes-explains-lewis-hamilton-setting-issue-baku]Link here[/url][/color] wrote:"The settings were wrong because we had a messy Friday where we couldn't configure it in the way we should have done," he added. "So it was preset in the wrong way. And it happened a little bit earlier on Lewis' car than on Nico's car, I think it was three laps earlier.
Stupid question.SR71 wrote:A mistake in the factory caused Spain?
To be precise, only three. Baku, Singapore and Japan.SR71 wrote:Rosberg has won on merit many times this season ....
Ignore all other problems and try to imagine if Malaysia failure wouldn't have occured. Just one failure!SR71 wrote:Championships aren't decided in one race or one failure this year included.
Nico has been slower in the last races which leds me to think that he is driving quite cautiously. It would surprise me if he leads the race though it would be great. I mean, of course he will try to get the pole, but if he is second he is not going to fight for the victory unless Lewis makes an awful start.Shrieker wrote:Everyone's assuming Lewis will be ahead. Who's to say Nico won't get pole and disappear into the distance.. Lewis needs to get the job done on Saturday and get a good start on Sunday if he's even to stand a chance.
One can dislike or like Nico, but it cant be denied that he is a quite calculating and intelligent driver. I am 99,99% sure that he will reject any dangerous move which can put his WC under risk.Fulcrum wrote:My prediction.
Lewis and Rosberg to crash with indeterminate responsibility on either driver (i.e. racing incident). Lewis continues to finish 3rd/4th, Rosberg DNF.
I'm sure that would be his intention, but he doesn't have perfect control over everything around him. Starts are never completely controlled, being the best example I can think of on short notice.Vasconia wrote:One can dislike or like Nico, but it cant be denied that he is a quite calculating and intelligent driver. I am 99,99% sure that he will reject any dangerous move which can put his WC under risk.Fulcrum wrote:My prediction.
Lewis and Rosberg to crash with indeterminate responsibility on either driver (i.e. racing incident). Lewis continues to finish 3rd/4th, Rosberg DNF.
That's the main problem for Hamilton, Red Bull will gamble for a race win and they are willing to sacrifice a solid second for that, it happened in Brazil it might happen again in Abu Dhabi.turbof1 wrote:He is partially trolling, and partially hoping Hamilton does that so his drivers can get pass both the Mercedes'.dans79 wrote:Horner now weighing in on how his team can prevent Nico from becoming WDC.
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/127233
Relevant to the race, nothing more, nothing less.mrX wrote:Omg, Rosberg just blew his engine!
Mister mrX, you just received a warning. In short any link made to the title will get you a warning. However, any events happened during the race which have an impact on the title but without referring yourself to the title, are allowable. Mind if the moderator deems you are trying to hide a remark towards the title in your post, you'll still receive a warning, so don't try to play smart. This rule starts from this post and will stay on for as long as the topic is being discussed, including after the race itself.mrX wrote:Omg, Rosberg just blew his engine! Title to Hamilton, woohoo!
what?Fifty wrote:Don't forget about Kimi... he could just go all honey badger on them and upset the top 5...
...probably not... but maybe...
So, the first rule of the Race Thread is: "You do not talk about The Title".turbof1 wrote:The 2016 driver championship is getting to a climax with the final round in Abu Dhabi...