And a Ferrari 1-2 with Vettel in 1st would have been far better, and far more readily achievable, if Vettel had simply held station during the initial laps. Raikkonen doing what you suggest would have immediately demoted him to 3rd - I'm sure you couldn't care less, but Ferrari might think differently.Sevach wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 06:43What i wanted is for him to leave the door wide open for Vettel, a Vettel win would've been better for Ferrari than a Kimi win, and that's exactly what i expected.Fulcrum wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 06:18In the absence of overt team orders and well choreographed directives at the start, what exactly should Kimi have done differently? Are you suggesting that he should make the decision within himself to move over before he is asked to?Sevach wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 01:46
Jeez, we have an understanding problem... Constructor points LOST at Monza were on Vettel.
Kimi hasn't won a single race, and that was his first pole with what many consider the best car on the grid, and has been beaten in just about every race where Sebastian didn't make a bad miastake.
That's not great performance no matter how you want to slice it.
He's too slow to be a lead driver, he performs like a lapdog he should act like a good compliant lapdog.
What racing driver with a pulse is going to do that? Even Massa wouldn't have done that for Alonso.
You state, repeatedly, that Raikkonen crowded out Vettel. Where did he do this?
Into the first chicane Raikkonen held the inside line, never moved off it, and left 30-50cm of space between himself and Vettel at all times. Into the Roggia chicane, Raikkonen was in front by some car lengths, assumed his line for the corner several hundred metres from the apex, and again never moved off that line. Vettel screwed himself by being in two minds - dive bomb his teammate or pay attention to Hamilton.
You are also vastly overstating Vettel's superiority.
Correcting for retirements, Raikkonen would have 195 points, 31 adrift of Vettel. Vettel is behind Hamilton by 30 points. Does that make Vettel Hamilton's lapdog then?
Given the limitations within which he operates - this is practically the first weekend where he has received overtly preferential treatment - he's doing as much as the team could hope for: he's beating Bottas, and scoring podiums consistently; more consistently than Vettel.
In terms of fair driving, ignoring championship concerns and the fact they work for the same team Kimi was fair, but both in the run to T1 and T3 he defended and made Vettel's life more difficult, which i thought was selfish and i'm gonna call him out on it.
The performance difference between Kimi and Vettel can't be overstated, the only races where Kimi finished infront where races where Vettel ran into some kind of problem, either self inflicted or by other means, Kimi is not championship winning material anymore that's the reality.
And yes Hamilton is taking Vettel to school, and proving to be the better more consistent performer, just like Vettel is compared to Kimi.
Makes sense given Vettels comment earlier in the weekend, “If he’s starting from pole, I guess he’s allowed to win”alexx_88 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 06:02Mark Hughes' race report clarifies what happened I think. So he's saying that Kimi's pole lap triggered a "no team orders" clause in his contract. Vettel, was described by a lot of people as a "planner" and that, when things don't go as his plans, tends to lose focus and make mistakes. Given these pieces of information, I offer you this theory: Vettel knew that he wasn't going to get any help from the team or Kimi, so he probably set his mind to do it at the start or at least in the first lap, thinking that Kimi will get one of his trademark starts. But he didn't and this is where it began to fall apart for Seb. Instead of re-assessing the situation, he got desperate and tried to force his way past with two very clumsy moves. As per his plan of doing it all in the first lap
Hamilton’s position was far better than that. Assuming they both crash, the gap remains with one race less. Compare this with the prospect of not driving aggressively and finishing behind Vettel, either losing 3 points or 10 points.
Thank you, I appreciate that.
We only need to look at this season. Lost 25 points in Germany, 13 in Baku, 13 in Italy and 5 in France. That's 56 points without even counting the 24 Hamilton would've lost. Heck he pulled a 30 points lead with a mechanical DNF AND grid penalties. One can only imagine this car in the hands of Alonso.
haha.. makes sense. I buy it. It explains the "urgency" Vettel had at the start. Still it was a huge mistake on Vettel's part.subcritical71 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 12:36Makes sense given Vettels comment earlier in the weekend, “If he’s starting from pole, I guess he’s allowed to win”alexx_88 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 06:02Mark Hughes' race report clarifies what happened I think. So he's saying that Kimi's pole lap triggered a "no team orders" clause in his contract. Vettel, was described by a lot of people as a "planner" and that, when things don't go as his plans, tends to lose focus and make mistakes. Given these pieces of information, I offer you this theory: Vettel knew that he wasn't going to get any help from the team or Kimi, so he probably set his mind to do it at the start or at least in the first lap, thinking that Kimi will get one of his trademark starts. But he didn't and this is where it began to fall apart for Seb. Instead of re-assessing the situation, he got desperate and tried to force his way past with two very clumsy moves. As per his plan of doing it all in the first lap
The theory is not completely off-merit, especially as arguably it's been proven right a few times. In 2010 he was the underdog, had all the time in the world and a brilliant car underneath him. All of these factors lower the pressure experienced, sort of a "nothing to lose" mentality. On the other hand, he's right now feeling the pressure to emulate his idol, Schumacher, I'm sure the army of Ferrari fans and employees convey the feeling that he's their hope to get another title after 10 years. If he wins this one, it will become easier.
Question, if they run side by side into T1 and Raikkonen let's Vettel outbrake him, what's Hamilton going to do? How is he going to sneak past without losing a FW and risking a penalty?Fulcrum wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 12:00And a Ferrari 1-2 with Vettel in 1st would have been far better, and far more readily achievable, if Vettel had simply held station during the initial laps. Raikkonen doing what you suggest would have immediately demoted him to 3rd - I'm sure you couldn't care less, but Ferrari might think differently.Sevach wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 06:43What i wanted is for him to leave the door wide open for Vettel, a Vettel win would've been better for Ferrari than a Kimi win, and that's exactly what i expected.Fulcrum wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 06:18
In the absence of overt team orders and well choreographed directives at the start, what exactly should Kimi have done differently? Are you suggesting that he should make the decision within himself to move over before he is asked to?
What racing driver with a pulse is going to do that? Even Massa wouldn't have done that for Alonso.
You state, repeatedly, that Raikkonen crowded out Vettel. Where did he do this?
Into the first chicane Raikkonen held the inside line, never moved off it, and left 30-50cm of space between himself and Vettel at all times. Into the Roggia chicane, Raikkonen was in front by some car lengths, assumed his line for the corner several hundred metres from the apex, and again never moved off that line. Vettel screwed himself by being in two minds - dive bomb his teammate or pay attention to Hamilton.
You are also vastly overstating Vettel's superiority.
Correcting for retirements, Raikkonen would have 195 points, 31 adrift of Vettel. Vettel is behind Hamilton by 30 points. Does that make Vettel Hamilton's lapdog then?
Given the limitations within which he operates - this is practically the first weekend where he has received overtly preferential treatment - he's doing as much as the team could hope for: he's beating Bottas, and scoring podiums consistently; more consistently than Vettel.
In terms of fair driving, ignoring championship concerns and the fact they work for the same team Kimi was fair, but both in the run to T1 and T3 he defended and made Vettel's life more difficult, which i thought was selfish and i'm gonna call him out on it.
The performance difference between Kimi and Vettel can't be overstated, the only races where Kimi finished infront where races where Vettel ran into some kind of problem, either self inflicted or by other means, Kimi is not championship winning material anymore that's the reality.
And yes Hamilton is taking Vettel to school, and proving to be the better more consistent performer, just like Vettel is compared to Kimi.
If Vettel was that much faster than Raikkonen, as you claim, then he would have had no trouble getting past at his leisure. Likewise, having 2 cars in front would have placed Hamilton under pressure, not the other way around, and Vettel could have been in-line to gain 10 points over Hamilton rather than 7. Its a complete brain fade on Vettel's part. Vettel was racing Hamilton, not Raikkonen. He should have focused on Hamilton first, Raikkonen not at all.
No-one is suggesting Raikkonen is going to win a championship - but your suggestion he self-immolate whenever convenient for Vettel is just short sighted and stupid. There are more appropriate ways of managing situations when your number 2 proves to be inconveniently quick.
Ferrari have handled this situation very poorly and they'll only have themselves to blame if, and when, they miss out on both Championships.
Hamilton would wait for Variante della Roggia and pass him there. Like he did with Vettel.
If Raikkonen did that into turn 1, he'd have been out of position and passed by Hamilton into Turn 3.Sevach wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 18:08Question, if they run side by side into T1 and Raikkonen let's Vettel outbrake him, what's Hamilton going to do? How is he going to sneak past without losing a FW and risking a penalty?Fulcrum wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 12:00And a Ferrari 1-2 with Vettel in 1st would have been far better, and far more readily achievable, if Vettel had simply held station during the initial laps. Raikkonen doing what you suggest would have immediately demoted him to 3rd - I'm sure you couldn't care less, but Ferrari might think differently.Sevach wrote: ↑04 Sep 2018, 06:43
What i wanted is for him to leave the door wide open for Vettel, a Vettel win would've been better for Ferrari than a Kimi win, and that's exactly what i expected.
In terms of fair driving, ignoring championship concerns and the fact they work for the same team Kimi was fair, but both in the run to T1 and T3 he defended and made Vettel's life more difficult, which i thought was selfish and i'm gonna call him out on it.
The performance difference between Kimi and Vettel can't be overstated, the only races where Kimi finished infront where races where Vettel ran into some kind of problem, either self inflicted or by other means, Kimi is not championship winning material anymore that's the reality.
And yes Hamilton is taking Vettel to school, and proving to be the better more consistent performer, just like Vettel is compared to Kimi.
If Vettel was that much faster than Raikkonen, as you claim, then he would have had no trouble getting past at his leisure. Likewise, having 2 cars in front would have placed Hamilton under pressure, not the other way around, and Vettel could have been in-line to gain 10 points over Hamilton rather than 7. Its a complete brain fade on Vettel's part. Vettel was racing Hamilton, not Raikkonen. He should have focused on Hamilton first, Raikkonen not at all.
No-one is suggesting Raikkonen is going to win a championship - but your suggestion he self-immolate whenever convenient for Vettel is just short sighted and stupid. There are more appropriate ways of managing situations when your number 2 proves to be inconveniently quick.
Ferrari have handled this situation very poorly and they'll only have themselves to blame if, and when, they miss out on both Championships.
Kimi acted on his own self interest by defending Vettel, yeah Vettel (who i repeatedly called stupid) could've done what you said, but that doesn't change the fact that Raikkonen is out for himself rather than the team.
You said Vettel should've worried about Hamilton right, i say both of them should've worried about Hamilton and have an agreement of either non attack(for now) or switch as soon as possible.
But Kimi clearly wanted to keep Vettel behind for reasons that are only important to him (and you apparently).