f1316 wrote: ↑14 Apr 2018, 21:26
Best car in Bahrain? Where are you getting that from? The 1-2 Ferrari had in qualifying kinda says otherwise.
Best strategy in Bahrain, yes, and yet they still weren’t able to win.
Anyway, whatever, we’ll see - my real point was that Mercedes will come back.
I don't think pace in qualifying = pace in the race. It's on a different day, under different track conditions, often using different tyres to those used for the majority of the race distance, with different fuel loads and the former rarely has people deliberately trying to block you. But, happy to agree to disagree as you seem very sure they are the same.
f1316 wrote: ↑14 Apr 2018, 21:26
yet they still weren’t able to win
I think the Mercedes strategists dropped the ball again and misjudged when to push. You seem to think Vettel deliberately let Bottas close at 1.8 seconds a lap and into DRS range*.
Just to be clear, if there had been another lap (or, indeed, several), you think Vettel would have comfortably held the race lead? I've looked at Vettel and Ferrari's comments after the race and they seemed happier than I'd have expected if they had cruised to victory with plenty in hand.
f1316 wrote: ↑14 Apr 2018, 21:26
You know as well as I do that for 39 laps of the Bahrain GP Vettel was nursing tyres and Hamilton was on more suitable rubber.
Ah, if we take out some of the things that made the Mercedes faster then, yes, you are right, Ferrari were faster. I'd argue it's a bit of a false comparison though. For instance, Hamilton was half a second faster on Soft tyres during Qualifying today, so if we take away Ferrari's pace on the Ultra Softs (they are on more suitable rubber for traversing the relevant distance, so we should ignore that) then you could say that Mercedes is the much faster car in China. I'd disagree though.
*Source - James Allen