bhallg2k wrote:
What's to stop a driver from riding out an entire race behind a car he wouldn't ordinarily be able to pass only to use DRS on the last lap and win the race? Is it fair to require teams/drivers to have to be a full second better than everyone around them to guarantee their just rewards?
Given this scenario you would see pass backs thru the whole race. Though there might have been some pass backs I didn't see ANY passbacks. Moreover, when Hamilton passed Vettel, or Webber passed Schumacher, etc there were no pass backs even attempted. Passbacks have not been any problem.
For instance, when Hamilton passed Vettel at turn 7, I thought it was a cleaver plan by Vettel to set Hamilton up for the DRS zone, but no, Hamilton's pace was superior so it wasn't even close by the time they reached the DRS zone.
Schumacher, OTOH, is a very hard driver to pass. Webber could have never passed Schumacher if it hadn't been for the DRS zone, and then it with only some cunning that got it done. Thus without DRS we have faster cars/drivers being held up for entire stints which is bad for racing and bad for spectating. DRS rather smartly takes care of this problem, or at least minimizes it.
The thing with the current tires is their rate of falloff and marbles. You don't have to make tires wear longer to take care of these problems. You can still have a wide speed difference between the hard and soft tires without reaching the end of their life with a 4 second slower lap all the sudden. That's just too crazy for drivers or fans to account for IMO. That's what makes the racing artificial to me ..