sosic2121 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2020, 11:22
El Scorchio wrote: ↑17 Aug 2020, 10:55
sosic2121 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2020, 09:52
And that's clearly not what happened last week!
No, it's not. Bottas was ahead so got first call on pit stop strategy anyway as per what the team usually do, and it's already been mentioned that he HAD to pit at that point for a couple of reasons, one of which being LeClerc. Also Hamilton managed to produce a much better and longer middle stint on his tyres (which he is always much better at than Bottas) where Bottas on fresh rubber didn't make big inroads to his lead, to allow him to delay his stop and get on the better tyre for less time at the end. Hamilton just drove himself into contention for second place by extending his tyre life, even though a shot at the win was a step too far given the race conditions.
O come on. Even Bottas isn't that naive. They boxed him early, checked his tyres, and told Hamilton he can go on. What was the purpose of that, other than to build offset to Bottas?
If that's really what you think, then there's little point in us having the same old tired argument about it and probably not on this thread.
However as an example, I believe they did the exact same thing at the Italian Grand Prix last year, but the other way round with the drivers, meaning Bottas was able to catch and pass Hamilton on fresher rubber later on to try and have a go at the race leader. Hardly a case of favouring Hamilton over Bottas, and if they were, then why not order Bottas to give Hamilton second place? Likewise with the Austrian GP this year, why wouldn't they have ordered Bottas to let Hamilton past in order to mitigate his penalty? Or come to think about it why don't they engineer a way to have Hamilton pass Bottas in every race where they are running line astern?