drunkf1fan wrote: ↑08 Oct 2017, 18:22
Shrieker wrote: ↑08 Oct 2017, 18:00
Artur Craft wrote: ↑08 Oct 2017, 17:55
Bottas is not just a second driver anymore. He's officially now the donkey/bitch (sorry for the terms, but that's the sad reality) of the team. He's been used repetidely to hold others for Hamilton while not been allowed to race the first driver and almost stopping the car to let him go (and all that with Vettel out of the championship!!!)
I think that's just sour grapes over what had been said about Raikkonen. Mercedes couldn't have
possibly risked first place just to give Bottas a shot at third. That would be just dumb. Hamilton's tires hurt a lot, for more than a couple laps behind Bottas, and the team were courteous enough towards him by not asking him to move over immediately, unlike Ferrari (would, faced with the similar).
Exactly, no team would ever do this. When the Sky team asked Verstappen about it he was 100% clear that it was not wrong, it was sensible and that he would have blocked him much worse in that situation. Not switching them would be insane.
There is a huge difference between "Alonso is faster than you" and switching positions on two people on the same strategy who are genuinely fighting and they just give the position to one driver. Bottas was very clearly a full pitstop behind, no team would ever compromise the driver ahead in this situation. Ferrari and most other teams would have pit Bottas earlier or moved him over 3-4 laps earlier than they did and would have kept Bottas out an extra 5 laps slowing Verstappen. Mercedes moved over Bottas ridiculously slowly, hurt Hamilton fairly badly and were extremely kind to Verstappen in pitting Bottas as quickly as they did after he let Hamilton through.
I am amazed that people still talk about suspicious disparity in Mercedes' treatment of their drivers, even after what happened in Hungary. For starters, when Schumacher was out of contention in 1999, he did play a good No.2 role, coming back from break. For as long as Bottas was in contention for championship, he got all the right treatment. That exact treatment, potentially cost a race win in Bahrain, which was not an issue at all for Mercedes. Now it's him to play the good team mate, like Schumacher did being out of championship contention.
Outside of the competitive machinery part, ask any top driver on the grid, which team would they prefer to join, Ferrari or Mercedes, while Mercedes have Lewis and Ferrari have Vettel? The answer would tell you the reality.