Sieper wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 15:55
Conspiracy theory. That is nice.
It's not meant as an insult. It's literally an accurate description.
Conspiracy - a secret plan by a group to do something
Theory - a series of ideas yet to be proven
Sieper wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 15:55
Would stroll immediately have to go out of his way to let Bottas passed? Would that be a good idea with the current RP copycar controversy? No. Or just have Bottas save up energy for a few laps to make the pass on the straight. Stroll did NOTHING to defend. Bottas still had more then enough time behind Max to kill of his first set of tires in the wake of Lewis. Max never got far out of reach as Lewis was waiting for Bottas to get on Max arse right from the start.
You address none of the points I raised pointing out that all of these assumptions are unlikely.
I'll summarise:-
Stroll hurt his race by holding Bottas behind him. The lap times are clear.
Lap 2:
1:25.189
Lap 3:
1:24.823
Lap 4:
1:25.410
Lap 5:
1:26.029
Now, without having to deal with Bottas
Lap 6:
1:24.850
Lap 7:
1:24.979
Lap 8:
1:24.623
Lap 9:
1:24.819
lap 10:
1:24.745
Lap 11:
1:24.917
Lap 12:
1:24.928
There is a clear pattern.
Stroll would have lost more time and might have DNFed if he'd fought Bottas harder. Yes, it was a boring pass. That's what happens with DRS at the end of the main straight. Fighting more, swerving onto the marbles, risking hitting Bottas, keeping Bottas behind him for another lap, all have would hurt his race even further. What
possible benefit would he have had for battling Bottas for more laps? Please, provide just one.
Bottas closed up on Verstappen but he'd lost all the advantages of a pre-charged Mercedes PU, DAS prepared tyres and tyres that had been fighting for 5 laps rather than simply following. Do you think he had his best chance of overtaking when the performance differential was at it's highest, in lap 1? Or in lap 7, when his tyres were in worse condition than Verstappen after battling Stroll and then closing up to Verstappen and Verstappen's tyres were up to optimum temperature?
Sieper wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 17:08
But certainly the RBR pit wall was afraid of that as they extended Max' first stint to come out in front of them. And at that point Max would otherwise have had much newer rubber. But me making that hypothesis is thus not so strange RBR strategy team was certainly fearful of it.
As were Mercedes, otherwise they would've undercut Verstappen.
If Racing Point follow Mercedes' directions, then why did any of this happen?
If Racing Point (and Williams, etc) are willing to damage their races to help Mercedes beat an already slower car, why don't they do it in every race and why are they so bad at it? Why did Verstappen manage to lap all of them but, mysteriously, wasn't impeded any more than Bottas was (and was impeded less than Hamilton)?
Why did Stroll even overtake Bottas in the first place?