Just_a_fan wrote:Anyone who thinks that Hamilton is slow needs their head examining. Even Button has admitted that Hamilton is worryingly fast.
Hamilton's problem is that he is fast no matter what. And if the car is killing the tyres when it is fast then his speed plays against him fairly quickly.
Button's style is nearly as quick as Hamilton's but, crucially, it is kinder to the tyres. A case of tortoise and hare, it seems.
An interesting tweet to Brundle suggets that 77% of drivers who have won the first race of the season have gone on to win the title since 1990. If that is true, then Hamilton has got his work cut out to rebalance the odds.
I'm guessing that the 77% stat doesn't take account of the fact that in most teams there is a definite fast and slow driver (these being relative terms, of course). Where both drivers for a team are closely matched I'm betting the the result lies somewhat in the remaining 23% of races...
IMHO I think the whole "killing the tyres" thing is bull.....for now at least.
Both McLarens totally left the pack at the beginning and the gap between Hamilton and Button hardly changed at all except for when Hamilton was released directly behind Perez.
This means that Hamiltons tyres were just fine in relation to Buttons. If he started to suddenly drop off the pace at the end of the first stint then we'd have seen it, but he was at a constant speed for the most part and both McLarens held a consant gap after Buttons initial smasher of a start.
Due to the fact that being released behind Perez put Hamilton about 6 seconds further behind Button, when Vettel was about 6 seconds behind Hamilton before the pits, means that Vettel was breathing down his neck in the second stint.
Due to this Hamilton would have had to step on the gas to make sure Vettel on the faster soft tyres didn't catch up and get into the DRS zone, which would explain how he managed to create a 2 second gap between himself and Vettel while using slower tyres.
So why didn't Hamilton have the ability to once again pull away from the rest of the crowd with Button on the restart?
Button and Hamilton both had the same tyres as they both pitted at the same time and both had only safety car laps on them, so can it really be the tyres?
If McLaren were truly playing the fuel management game, then it would make sense that Hamilton seemed to have suddenly lost that speed the McLaren had due to the fact that he used more fuel to pull away from Vettel on the second stint after being behind Perez cost him six seconds and almost put Vettel in DRS territory.
Meanwhile Button only had to use extra fuel when he really needed to and so had the reserve left to dash off again and also set fastest laps to respond to Vettel while Hamilton was struggling to keep Webber off his tail.
To further support the theory that McLaren were playing the fuel management game, after the engineers told Button that he had a ten second lead over Hamilton, Vettel began to take time out of his lead immediately after.
How does a car that is reported to be killing its tyres go about setting a fastest lap on the last lap of the race?
That sounds to me like Button said "okay, ten second lead, let me lay off for a bit" while Vettel was pushing all the while to catch Hamilton who he now had in his sights.
I don't know, there seems to be more evidence to support the fact that the McLarens were just playing it safe when they felt to/could as opposed to being pressured at the end (not including Hamilton who could not employ this strategy once having to use too much fuel to push past Perez and run away from Vettel).