Schuttelberg wrote: ↑14 May 2017, 22:58
I have to say, DRS really ruins some races!
flynfrog wrote: ↑15 May 2017, 01:29
I think the removal of DRS would make this perfect. We could have watched HAM and VET battle it out for a few more laps.
Yeah, about that DRS argument... Are you aware that had there been no DRS at all, that Vettel might have been stuck behind Verstappen longer than he was (if not until he pitted) if there had been no DRS?
Lets recap: I am explicitly talking about the point in the race when Hamilton was closing on Vettel on their very first stint, implying they were about to stop and try an undercut, which then of course Ferrari used as an opportunity to pit Vettel and cover off that eventuality themselves, but also putting him into a gap that would see him close up to Verstappen rather quickly on a track as notoriously hard to pass as Catalunya.
DRS to thank, it was a none-issue and Vettel breezed past in unspectacular fashion, but what if there had been no DRS at all? Had we really seen this exciting "raw Hamilton/Vettel" battle that some are arguing was ruined by the DRS pass Hamilton pulled off towards the end? It goes both ways.
I'm not the biggest fan or supporter of DRS, but I see it as an ugly necessity, on some tracks more than others. Catalunya has been one of these tracks where it is nigh on impossible to pass. DRS was invented for the sole purpose of not having trains of cars because a car might end up behind a significantly slower one due to strategy or unfortunate circumstance. I.e. When Hamilton pitted in Australia, but even despite DRS, failed to overtake Verstappen and handed the win to Vettel who stayed out longer and overcame both. We want DRS to be only as effective that it is less effective among similar paced cars, but more effective towards slower cars.
Point in case; Hamilton/Rosberg in Brazil (among other races) in same cars, but failed to get passed despite DRS. It's an okay trade-off, one born partly out of necessity due to the complex aerodynamics on cars that make passing or closing up difficult. That might be the rawest, but when a quicker car fails to gain on a slower one because of these complex aero, it IMO doesn't have more to do with racing than if there is a device that sheds some drag at the press of a button. Hamilton still needed to get into that 'window', stay there and create that opportunity, evident by the amount of laps it took him to pull it off. It was as much a consequence of good driving, superior tire (soft vs medium) and DRS rather than being attributed to DRS alone.