I can understand Mercedes holding position. A bankable 3 & 4 on the second race of the season - outstanding result, especially when everyone is calling (and getting) heads to roll within the team, with questions whether Mercedes will stay in F1 and questions over the car - it was a prudent and valuable result for a team under pressure with an added overall positive PR story displaying a 'united team' and 'responsible drivers'. Win-win for the team, win-win for the brand.
RedBull - not so much. The exact same scenario occurred for them and it was handled poorly. The team orders where prudent - at a time when tire life is still an unknown and one safety car could have a pack right on them. Vettel had no way of knowing if a 'cliff' was just around the corner and could have easily lost several places.
While we all admire the 'killer' instinct - at some stage you have to decide - are you a winner or a...
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kn481KcjvMo[/youtube]