djos wrote:Doing a great job living up to your reputation as this forums grumpy old contrarian.
;D
You are comparing the lap times from two different stints. On the option tyre - Lewis probably took more out of his option tyres to get past MAG and MAS and close the gap to ROS. Then, after the pit stops - on the prime tyre - Lewis seemed quicker which he used to close the gap significantly. In just about 2-3 laps, he reduced the gap quite significantly (at some point, just after his race engineer had told him to wait till the end, he reduced the gap by nearly 6 tenths). He was just within DRS zone when ROS missed the chicane and that got him over a second behind Lewis (I think nearly 2). Lewis continued to put in the laps until there was a gap that slowly increased to the 4 seconds.Hobbs04 wrote:I'll give you first 2 points but the 3rd point I can't believe which is why it's smells of controversydans79 wrote:for several reasons:Hobbs04 wrote: Why did Lewis pull away after the "chicane gate" where prior to that Nico was keeping a gap...
1. Lewis was faster all weekend
2. it's harder to go fast while ridding in the draft unless you are substantially faster than the car infront
3. it probably took Nico a lap or two to collect himself after watching Lewis blow by
I agree that Ricciardo wasn't anything sensational. Well, if you analyze how Ricciardo is strategizing his races, you will see a pattern. He will not be very aggressive in the first half of the race and will let go places if gets attacked in the beginning, chooses clear air to drive his first stints, goes longer than most. By that time, people in front of him, including Vettel would be fighting cats and dogs to gain positions and would have damaged their tyres and would be losing speed, whereas in clear air Ricciardo would be doing better times although further behind. People in front then choose to pit, come back and keep fighting and destroying their tyres. Ricciardo takes late pits, gets fresh tyres and would start attacking when others are going down fighting. This has been the case for him most of the times. It is not that he is fighting Cars who has tyres of same age. At the moment, It is working for him and in instances of late Safety Cars, it would be gold mine for him. Thats my analysis.iotar__ wrote:Perez was driver of the day. Ricciardo - not even close, bad qualifying, bad start and no on to compete with except for his struggling team-mate (competitive no-man's land). Perez made a difference with a mediocre car, finished two places behind DR, gained positions and kept it thanks to driving not huge car advantage, beating faster McLarens and Ferrari (faster including both Q and race).
After a good rest and reflection I was a little hung over from the media after the last two weeks leading up to monza.Phil wrote:
You are comparing the lap times from two different stints. On the option tyre - Lewis probably took more out of his option tyres to get past MAG and MAS and close the gap to ROS. Then, after the pit stops - on the prime tyre - Lewis seemed quicker which he used to close the gap significantly. In just about 2-3 laps, he reduced the gap quite significantly (at some point, just after his race engineer had told him to wait till the end, he reduced the gap by nearly 6 tenths). He was just within DRS zone when ROS missed the chicane and that got him over a second behind Lewis (I think nearly 2). Lewis continued to put in the laps until there was a gap that slowly increased to the 4 seconds.
I think what you're seeing here is simply that Lewis had quite good pace at Monza and was just that bit quicker. I don't see Rosberg suddently being slower after he missed the chicane - it was simply that at that point, Lewis was in clear air and used his pace advantage.
His struggling teammate who happens to be a 4x world champion... I mean if that's not a benchmark I don't know what is.iotar__ wrote:Perez was driver of the day. Ricciardo - not even close, bad qualifying, bad start and no on to compete with except for his struggling team-mate (competitive no-man's land). Perez made a difference with a mediocre car, finished two places behind DR, gained positions and kept it thanks to driving not huge car advantage, beating faster McLarens and Ferrari (faster including both Q and race).
If you look at the lap times, they are not very different and actually, Vettel was faster in the first stint on average, despite fighting off with McLarens, Force India and Ferrari. It was the early pit stop (18th lap) which was undoing for Vettel whereas a late stop (26th Lap) gave fresh tyres for an attack for Ricciardo. Had they given a late stop to Vettel too, result would have been similar I guess and Daniel would not have been able to pass Vettel.Diesel wrote:His struggling teammate who happens to be a 4x world champion... I mean if that's not a benchmark I don't know what is.iotar__ wrote:Perez was driver of the day. Ricciardo - not even close, bad qualifying, bad start and no on to compete with except for his struggling team-mate (competitive no-man's land). Perez made a difference with a mediocre car, finished two places behind DR, gained positions and kept it thanks to driving not huge car advantage, beating faster McLarens and Ferrari (faster including both Q and race).
Code: Select all
1 S. VETTEL 3 D. RICCIARDO
1 14:05:20 1 14:05:23
2 1:31.066 2 1:32.117
3 1:30.714 3 1:30.983
4 1:30.446 4 1:30.796
5 1:30.521 5 1:31.761
6 1:30.559 6 1:31.259
7 1:30.805 7 1:30.850
8 1:30.558 8 1:30.807
9 1:30.507 9 1:30.711
10 1:30.396 10 1:30.896
11 1:30.534 11 1:30.637
12 1:30.362 12 1:30.544
13 1:30.547 13 1:30.338
14 1:30.499 14 1:30.313
15 1:30.652 15 1:30.448
16 1:30.628 16 1:30.448
17 1:30.846 17 1:30.404
18 P 1:35.276 18 1:30.315
19 1:50.748 19 1:30.312
20 1:30.049 20 1:30.326
21 1:29.890 21 1:30.242
22 1:30.089 22 1:30.294
23 1:30.005 23 1:30.229
24 1:29.837 24 1:30.553
25 1:30.182 25 1:31.056
26 1:29.753 26 P 1:34.737
27 1:29.865 27 1:50.629
28 1:29.764 28 1:29.570
29 1:30.025 29 1:29.587
30 1:30.265 30 1:29.480
31 1:29.630 31 1:28.987
32 1:29.672 32 1:29.161
33 1:29.433 33 1:29.048
34 1:29.141 34 1:28.880
35 1:29.521 35 1:28.884
36 1:29.508 36 1:29.065
37 1:29.513 37 1:28.840
38 1:29.598 38 1:29.540
39 1:29.913 39 1:30.570
40 1:30.565 40 1:29.498
41 1:29.687 41 1:29.246
42 1:29.596 42 1:28.875
43 1:29.648 43 1:29.466
44 1:29.624 44 1:28.831
45 1:29.985 45 1:28.734
46 1:29.762 46 1:28.804
47 1:31.961 47 1:29.928
48 1:30.229 48 1:28.922
49 1:30.200 49 1:28.962
50 1:30.556 50 1:29.689
51 1:30.495 51 1:29.451
52 1:30.453 52 1:28.818
53 1:30.463 53 1:28.588
Indeed, the early stop was clearly to jump the little train he was in. Some people call it a bad strategy, but I think this was their best option. Staying out longer would have meant overtaking the whole train with the new tires which would also have killed them at the end.mipade wrote:So the Vettel undercut against Magnussen cost him the 5th place but gaint him 2 or 3 positions all in all. I'd say th tactic was not to shabby.