zibby43 wrote: ↑15 May 2018, 00:09
LM10 wrote: ↑14 May 2018, 23:08
Arrivabene: "There is a difference between being consulted and being informed. We have been informed, not consulted." - You can choose whom to believe.
I like Maurizio, but that's the easiest choice I've been given in a while.
Every single word I hear uttered by Toto, Maruizio, and Christian is taken with a grain of salt. Their interests are protecting and promoting their teams, above all else.
Mark Hughes is known for taking rather biased side sometimes, especially when Hamilton is in question. Vetttel and Ferrari where consistent throughout this issue (since winter testing, unlike Pirelli that literally said they "prevented lottery that could have happened"). This has been confirmed by AMUS, that broke actual story and from where Mark copy pasted his "GPS data reveals" part of article. Ferrari didn't ask for it, but Mercedes. Ferrari tires didn't grain, and if they did they grained nowhere near as in case of Merc and even RB.
For me its very clear, McLaren went on record with AMUS that they didn't have graining, and therefore why would they want tire change to accommodate other teams that have this issue. Mark on the other hand said McLaren is a team that pushed for it. I would rather trust guys that actually broke this story weeks ago, then Hughes.
Cannonballer wrote: ↑15 May 2018, 05:26
I don't understand the motive behind the conspiracy to help Mercedes. How can anyone believe that the changes to the tire only helped Mercedes and (or hurt Ferrari); and Pirelli and the FIA made the changes only to help Mercedes? That is essentially saying that the FIA and Pirelli think that helping Mercedes continuing to dominate Formula 1 is going to make F1 more popular, exciting, appealing, and or money. There is no way.
Its not conspiracy. If your tires are graining hard, you will have to pit more frequently as you will be losing time duo to tire performances. If you are Merc, you can "suggest" Pirelli that there could be safety issues such as exploding tires, so they better fix it. Pirelli would and did take that side since its not in their interest that tires explode with hundreds of million of people watching it live, thats very bad PR.
So in essence, Merc had a reason for this change, they played safety card and Pirelli obviously went with safe option rather then risking any embarrassing tire issues that might ensue.