DVB wrote: ↑02 Sep 2018, 20:39
Is it me, or did the Ferrari looked to have problem's accelerating out of slow corners?
Btw, good theory Sieper!
Honestly, seems like too much power. Early on they just seemed to have more power than their traction could handle as the back end seemed to slide out as they put the power down as opposed to mid corner/etc.
Later in the race Kimi's rear tires were cooked and his speed out of corners went to hell.
On Siepers theory. Pushing someone off track and someone staying legally on track are different things. The track is defined as between the two white lines. You can go over this but you need to keep two wheels inside the white line. That is if someone goes out, the legality part of the rules is you must keep one side of the car 'on track', inside the white lines. The track is very much defined as between the white lines, not on the tarmac at all. Pushing someone off track is an entirely different situation to going wide but sticking with the limits of the rules.
Verstappen defended hard, he was a few inches out of leaving the space required and it wasn't the worst mistake in the world but at some point the smaller mistakes have to get cut out. Bottas was coming in late and fast, it was very unlikely that if he took the corner fairly sharply that Bottas would have been able to get around the outside.
The team screwed up though, he lost a lot of time defending against Bottas even after that when he was losing the position anyway. The faster car was stuck behind, let him through, stop defending and use Bottas's faster cars tow to try to stay 5 seconds ahead of Vettel. In fact had the team told him to let him through immediately the stewards may not have penalised him. Even if he gives up 4th to Vettel, he was risking Bottas and him not finishing which would have cost him even worse.