Karun Chandhok
1. Mercedes vs 2. Ferrari
Last year, Ferrari looked like they were a real match for the Mercedes in pre-season testing and when we got to Melbourne, that certainly proved to be the case. This year however, the Brackley squad seems to have taken another good step forward.
Visually the car is a logical update on their 2017 championship winner, but it’s obviously had all the right changes to make it much more user-friendly. Watching Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas out on track, they are able to metronomically hit the same line lap after lap with remarkable consistency. And speed.
Mercedes have been very smart about not showing their hand with the faster tyres, but make no mistake – a quick look at the race runs shows very clearly that they’re a step ahead of the pack. I reckon that gap is about four-tenths of a second at the moment, and unless they have some dramatic chassis imbalance when they use the softer tyres – high unlikely – they are unquestionably on top.
Watching at the very fast Turn 9 right hander, Bottas carried an unbelievable amount of speed through the apex without even a full lift of the throttle on the medium tyres, with fuel on board. In contrast, when watching either the Ferrari or the Red Bull on the long run, they just didn’t have the grip to carry the same speed through.
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The change of direction with the front end seemed to be a good step forward from last year. When you watch either between Turns 2 and 3 or further around the lap in the final sector, the Mercedes drivers are able to change direction incredibly sharply when they have a sequence of corners.
This allows them to just open up the line to the second part of a sequence and carry more apex speed than anyone else.
This is particularly worrying for the opposition, as the one opportunity that they had last year was on slower, twistier circuits like Monaco or Budapest. Clearly that area of weakness has been focused on and dealt with.
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The headlines from the last week of testing show that Ferrari were fastest on three days and Red Bull on the other one. However, come qualifying in Melbourne, I think the entire paddock will be pretty shocked if anyone other than a Mercedes is on pole position.
Watching the Ferrari out on track, it’s clearly a fast car. Last year in pre-season testing it looked like an easier car to drive than the Mercedes, but this time whenever the drivers try and lean on it a bit more and extract some more speed, it just doesn’t seem to be there.
Watching at Turn 4, for example, Kimi Raikkonen would charge in and try to get the nose to bite, but it just doesn’t dig in and pivot in the same way the Mercedes does. That rotation that they need mid-corner to get the car to turn while carrying the apex speed they want just isn’t there in the medium and slow-speed corners.
Watching at Turns 11 and 12 shows the stark difference between the lazier Ferrari and the sharper Mercedes in changes of direction.