Shrieker wrote:I think Lewis was lucky this race with the penalty. Had he started in 4th, he would've had to race hard like Rosberg did, finish the tyres and be forced into a 4th stop, thus ending up around 9th-10th. Instead, he just nursed the tyres trundling behind the midfielders first half of the race, which payed dividends later on.
The top 5 finishes Merc. had at the three opening races were all on merit, but this time they got a somewhat lucky top 5, especially with both Ferrari's hitting problems. Merc. clearly have a long long way to go before they can genuinely challenge the top runners in all conditions.
Thanks for pointing this out to me Shrieker!
What made me write my post is that I think Lewis's pace was quite good - at least during the second half of the race. Lewis and Rosberg show two different attempts of how to complete the race. One worked, the other didn't. I think in the first part or first two stints, Lewis went backwards as well. He started in 9th, was quickly 11th (I think following a bad start) and then found himself in 13th for quite some time if I am not mistaken. Rosberg on the other hand was able to defend his 1st position for a few laps, before gradually falling backwards.
It's harder to coast if you have the quickest teams right up your neck that's for sure - vs. Lewis, who was right in the pack of the midfielders that probably coudn't go faster than him anyway. I just wonder, what if Rosberg hadn't pushed as hard as I'm sure he did and not defend his position? He would have been passed easily by the cars behind him that's for sure, but perhaps he would have had less issue with his tyres and come 2nd half of the race, would have been rather competitive, just like Lewis? I think if he had driven Lewis's race, he would have at least been looking at 4th - at the very least in front of Lewis simply by starting further up the grid.
Perhaps my point is that the Merc in its current condition requires this - being hard on its tyres especially in the first half of the race, it's absolutely mandatory to drive them without pushing too hard. Then as the race progresses, the pace returns and be more competitive. I think the way Rosberg drove, he compromized his race and strategy in the first half of the race.