marmer wrote: ↑16 Dec 2018, 11:14
the standard of the broadcast is awful. never told which cars are onscreen and with half the gird looking the same it makes it hard to figure out who is who.
i watched the race start to finish and it must have been about 5 laps before i knew why massa had dropped back so far
Seems like an odd complaint... you're rarely explicitly told which car is which in F1. I didn't have much issue following who was who, the exception being the HWA and Jaguar cars. I think it's a matter of experience and knowledge - with F1 we know what the teams are because most of the field have some historic president for their liveries (Ferrari red, Mercedes silver, Renault yellow & black..etc) and we pontificate on the driver line ups for months ahead of the season so we know who is where.
As for Massa, the commentators said Lotterer, Massa, Vergne and Sims had penalties a lap or so before they all pitted to serve them... Unless you weren't watching the world feed commentary group?!
I think the lack of practice hampered the race director as well as the teams though. It helps to test camera angles and crossover times, but like the drivers they were limited to 30 minutes of practice (10 or so was lost for the Mortara red flag) and qualifying.