To be fair, i think a lot of the boreness was due to missing out some title contender fights.mani517 wrote: ↑29 May 2017, 06:12Without the prestige and history Monaco is nothing really. It is a tricky track to get the lap right and the absolute track limits make the drivers pay when they get it wrong, but, those good traits on their own don't make a great racing circuit - a good TT circuit for F1 cars, may be.
The track often relies on strategy, attrition, SC & weather for excitement and on track action.
Yesterday's 78 laps of racing produced, I think, 1 on-track pass on merit (may have to recheck that, but, I'm not counting the start and opening lap). That sounds worse, if we consider HAM (a capable racer, among the best out there) started from 13... and it sounds even worse if we consider VER (the wonderkid who is bit of an overtaking specialist according to many) was within DRS range of BOT with better tires (fresh US against used SS) and yet couldn't pass him for 10 laps after SC went in.
So, Monaco, without the heritage, is at the bottom of table when it comes to quality of racing. I'm sure some out there with better knowledge could defend it citing some exceptions from its long history and unforgiving nature of the track, but, that is not the point here - a track that struggles to produce racing on-track can't justify its position in the calendar (even if it is Monaco).
If Monaco has become even tougher to overtake with '17 spec wider cars, then, it solidifies the argument that without some external influence the racing is going to be a procession here in the coming years.
P.S: F1 has never been an overtaking spectacle in the recent times, the rules & tools of racing need to be improved to produce fair racing. But, that doesn't excuse the tracks like these. And this is just my opinion.
Different tyres. And he was still slow as molasses.
Okay then..Discussion is going a lot better, guys. Keep that up.
I'm sure I would love a Monaco where overtaking is tough, but, possible. With the current cars, it is bordering the impossible territory for various reasons.zac510 wrote: ↑29 May 2017, 11:38I agree with all of your points. I stated that there's never a single reason why we have a bad race, it's always a collusion of several factors (like a plane crash) and we are each just stating two of the main factors that made yesteday's Monaco race a bit boring.mani517 wrote: ↑29 May 2017, 10:51@zac510, I beg to differ. Car design didn't take a step backward -- it just never took a step in the right direction in recent past. I feel the wider cars and increased mechanical grip were a good couple of steps, but, they are pretty much undone by the aero sensitivity of the cars. So, while I acknowledge the shortcomings of the cars, I'm merely stating the shortcomings of this track.
The same wider aero sensitive cars raced close in the last few races -- not hundreds in number, but, there were some quality passes. The F1 world (even drivers and team) acknowledge passing is pretty much impossible in Monaco, so, my argument isn't baseless.
Monaco has failed (bar some exceptions in its long history) to offer fair racing opportunities, VER vs BOT yesterday was a good example. We saw that US was considerably superior to SS, we also saw that RedBull was a match for Mercedes, but, in spite of tailing BOT's gearbox for few laps VER can't find a way to pass. In my view, equally competitive car, better tires, DRS proximity (not one, but, all 3 together) favored VER and yet he couldn't find a way past BOT. Now, if we need to push the argument we can say VER simply wasn't on top his game yesterday, but, 78 laps and 1 overtake isn't a stat that helps.
"Don't shoot the messenger" -- you see circuit as a messenger for shortcomings of the car, but, I see the cars as messengers for the shortcomings of the circuit. In my view, both are fair arguments, so, blindly defending the circuit (just because of its status and history) doesn't seem fair.
However the reason why I defend Monaco is that I think it's important to have a diverse range of tracks - some that are tight and twisty (Monaco, Hungary), some that are flat out (Canada, Monza) that highlight different strengths and weaknesses of cars and drivers. If the tracks were homogenous then the car designs would be even more convergent (like a spec-series) and the best execution would win more often.
If Brawn and his team get the aerodynamic/following cars part right, Monaco will really come back to be a valuable race IMO, because of its unique technical and driver challenge. I hope we don't lose that!
I agree, not every race can be fireworks. But, to me, even an avg. race should show some on-track battles - front-runners or not. I would gladly accept a good scrape in the mid-field or at the back.Manoah2u wrote: ↑29 May 2017, 18:57To be fair, i think a lot of the boreness was due to missing out some title contender fights.mani517 wrote: ↑29 May 2017, 06:12Without the prestige and history Monaco is nothing really. It is a tricky track to get the lap right and the absolute track limits make the drivers pay when they get it wrong, but, those good traits on their own don't make a great racing circuit - a good TT circuit for F1 cars, may be.
The track often relies on strategy, attrition, SC & weather for excitement and on track action.
Yesterday's 78 laps of racing produced, I think, 1 on-track pass on merit (may have to recheck that, but, I'm not counting the start and opening lap). That sounds worse, if we consider HAM (a capable racer, among the best out there) started from 13... and it sounds even worse if we consider VER (the wonderkid who is bit of an overtaking specialist according to many) was within DRS range of BOT with better tires (fresh US against used SS) and yet couldn't pass him for 10 laps after SC went in.
So, Monaco, without the heritage, is at the bottom of table when it comes to quality of racing. I'm sure some out there with better knowledge could defend it citing some exceptions from its long history and unforgiving nature of the track, but, that is not the point here - a track that struggles to produce racing on-track can't justify its position in the calendar (even if it is Monaco).
If Monaco has become even tougher to overtake with '17 spec wider cars, then, it solidifies the argument that without some external influence the racing is going to be a procession here in the coming years.
P.S: F1 has never been an overtaking spectacle in the recent times, the rules & tools of racing need to be improved to produce fair racing. But, that doesn't excuse the tracks like these. And this is just my opinion.
Hamilton was toasted saturday and had no chance on making an impact during the race. He had to play safe. If Hamilton would have had P3 on qually or P2 (perhaps even P1) it would have been much more interesting, as a lot more was to be gained for Mercedes and more to be lost for Ferrari. After the start, Ferrari really had it in the bag and Vettel was treated a dish of tasty goods. Verstappen and Ricciardo had some cool fights. Some driver's attempts to pass ended in tears, including button's move.
The specific race was relatively boring, yes. But I don't think that's down to Monaco itself or the size of the cars.
Not every race can be fireworks. It wasn't like that ever in the past either.
The lap times of Kimi improved by 1,5s on the SS. Which kind of puts to rest the assumption that the new SS was the slower tyre for him. Seb was simply much faster than Kimi in the Race (for whatever reason). Had it been reverse Seb would have done an undercut on him and everyone would also have screamed and shouted: 'Team Order', 'Unfair', etc.. pp.CriXus wrote: ↑29 May 2017, 15:20The critical laps around Ferrari's pit-stops
Lap Raikkonen Vettel
30 1:17.105 1:16.636
31 1:17.074 1:17.166
32 1:17.663 1:17.052
33 1:17.034 1:17.188
34 1:34.039 (in-lap) 1:16.592
35 1:19.518 (out-lap) 1:16.446
36 1:16.114 1:16.264
37 1:16.133 1:15.587
38 1:15.606 1:15.238
39 1:15.527 1:32.673 (in-lap)
40 1:17.709 1:18.650 (out-lap)
I think that says it all. From what I remember Raikkonen didn't even seem to know he was coming in, and seemed surprised. All they had to do was find a few tenths of a second, which is all he would have needed. For all the talk of 'Vettel was faster' he just managed to come out ahead. Like Hamilton said, if you have a team working for you there's no way you can lose track position like that.Phil wrote: ↑29 May 2017, 18:14EDIT: Just watched the race again around the pistop window and Kimi just didn't deliver in the crucial phase that mattered, sadly for him. Kimi as the leading car should have been pushing like mad. Why didn't the engineer tell him? Push and then pit (as they usually do?). It just seemed strange... he asked about pitting and suddenly the call came immediately?
The previous lap record was from Hamilton(2016) and that was like a high 1.16(I think). The current layout is faster(the Swimming Pool Complex is more opened now?).
all tyres can always last the whole race. The important thing is how quick they can go. The reason Ricciardo passed BOT and VER is because they got stuck on traffic. Kimi was lapping at 1.17.0 on his old US. After the pit, he was doing 1.15.5 on new SS. So, the degradation of the US was of 2.5s(as a new US would be capable of ~1.14.5)
As always, you notice the very important things that most people seems too miss.