I would that this race was quite surprising because Massa has been traditionally a bad driver in wet. Moreover Brazil has been always very tricky when it rains and it was the last race, a lot of pressure... I was sad for Massa that day becase he was able to overcome all the negative factors and win the race. I think it has beeen one of the few(if not the only) good races in wet he has ever done.GPR-A wrote:Which is not surprising. Most drivers on the grid are better racers in wet than Rosberg.Vasconia wrote:Even Massa had a good race in wet in 2008. So be careful...GPR-A wrote:I hope it is going to be a wet weekend, that would eliminate Nico Rosberg's chances.
Quali Prediction (Hoping it is going to be wet):
1. Hamilton
2. Vettel
3. Ricciardo.
Rest doesn't matter.
Race (Hoping it is going to be wet again):
1. Hamilton
2. Vetstappen
3. Ricciardo.
Rest doesn't matter either.
Ferrari won't take part at the event?Juzh wrote:This will be a very easy race for red bulls once mercs inevitably crash each other out.
Red Bull beat Ferrari on merit last weekend, at a track where they were supposed to suffer. Verstappen had a mighty stint too, so no tyre degradation problems there.diego.liv wrote:Ferrari won't take part at the event?Juzh wrote:This will be a very easy race for red bulls once mercs inevitably crash each other out.
With all those turns, even if it's cool, they won't have so much issue warming their tyres. Plus RB, hot or cool, seems to have more deg then the two upfront
Not surprising you are wrong and cannot back up your theories, mindlessly attacking drivers which is accepted and common behaviour here as long as targets are right. Your level of F1 knowledge makes you suitable candidate for Sky commentator.GPR-A wrote:Which is not surprising. Most drivers on the grid are better racers in wet than Rosberg.
no it didn't.ChrisDanger wrote: Red Bull beat Ferrari on merit last weekend, at a track where they were supposed to suffer.
I wouldn't mind knowing what Dan's issue was, he surprisingly couldn't get his tires to live or perform as well as Max and past races have shown he's usually pretty handy at this.ChrisDanger wrote:Red Bull beat Ferrari on merit last weekend, at a track where they were supposed to suffer. Verstappen had a mighty stint too, so no tyre degradation problems there.
Unlike you, I am not selective in using contexts to showcase brittle arguments.iotar__ wrote:Not surprising you are wrong and cannot back up your theories, mindlessly attacking drivers which is accepted and common behaviour here as long as targets are right. Your level of F1 knowledge makes you suitable candidate for Sky commentator.GPR-A wrote:Which is not surprising. Most drivers on the grid are better racers in wet than Rosberg.
Other than these consolation BS performances, when was the last time Rosberg took a pole or won in wet? You are either a man or not. There's nothing like almost a man. That is the argument you are having.iotar_ wrote:- Silverstone and USA '15 he was considerably quicker than Hamilton, slower in Monaco and Suzuka, Malaysia Q '10 very quick - the only other I could remember, Rosberg has been good in the wet AFAIR. Brazil was not the only good wet race for Massa when he was quicker than Hamilton, he was similarly bad/quick/off track in Monaco '08 but didn't crash at the right time
- Myth of Hamilton's wet conditions brilliance brought up every time there's a chance of rain based mostly on one Silverstone race is getting annoying. There is a dozen examples to the contrary. Four mentioned, spinfest in China '09 (the only occasion not in the best cars which helps), China '07 gravel, crash vs Button in Canada, crane in Germany, lost Australia '10, find yourself the rest.