I am surprised by the strange strategy expectations.Zynerji wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 22:17This is literally why I think Kimi will win.godlameroso wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 18:16I'm not buying the one stopper as the fastest strategy, not at all. One safety car is all it takes to ruin that plan, I think it would make more sense to approach every race as a two stopper and adjusting instead of going for a default 1 stopper.
He's the highest placed 2 stopper, with 5 cars ahead with harder tyres that already have more laps on them. I expect him to be in first place by lap 4, then the stretch-dash while praying for a safety car that will come eventually. US->S->US to allow the late change to 1 stop if more safety cars come after, or chase down people that are on old tyres with his fresh US and light fuel after the track rubbers in even more.
Dark horse winner.
Just like in China, there will be little to no difference between the US and SS pace in the first stint. The fastest strategy without a SC is to run the SS as long as possible and switch to US in the end. This is an easy strategy as the teams learn about the US deg from the ones starting on it. The ones who start on US will need to stretch this stint to go for SS later. Without the SC we will barely see S runners at the front, but mainly in the midfield teams and Kimi.
With a SC nothing can be really predicted. Most probably an early SC will mean some US starters may switch to the S and try to go to the end. A bit later everyone will use the S to go to the end. A middle race SC might be most interesting, as the SS starters can not bold on the US, but the US runners using the S may be able to switch to the SS.
In all these scenarios I can not see Kimi as being gifted, as he has no good SS set anymore. With the S he will simply be not fast enough to stay at the front to profit from a late SC. The difference to the SS starters will be too low.