2011 Formula 1 Podium Design Proposal. National sponsors affect background race by race |
The short run to turn 1 meant few position changes at the start. |
Over the next few laps, the two McLaren drivers were wheel-to-wheel, evoking memories of last year's race when they jostled for position at a late stage. They must have swapped places about 3 or 4 times during this phase. After falling back in lap 1, Hamilton went to "Plan B", which turned out to be the better one, as his Plan B was a four-stop pit strategy. Button's three-stop strategy meant that he ultimately lost this battle, finishing in 6th place despite leading the race in lap 12. Hamilton ended up finishing where he started, in 4th. Getting in the mix was Ferrari driver Felipe Massa, who battled with Hamilton when his tyres were wearing thin. In the pits, they went in together with Massa in front, but Hamilton's stop was faster. Ferrari countered, it seemed, by releasing Massa just when the McLaren driver was going past their pit box, in a last ditch attempt to get him out in front. The two nearly collided, and because Hamilton's wheels were in front of the Brazillan's (plus he technically had right of way), the Brit left the pits ahead. Massa was not entirely out of McLaren's hair, however, as he wound up doing battle with Jenson Button later on, in the middle of the race. He stayed ahead for several laps before making a mistake in turn 12 and having to pit again. He finished in an unfortunate 11th place.
Kamui Kobayashi ahead of Michael Schumacher. |
McLaren weren't the only team having a civil war, either. Lotus-Renault GP let its two drivers fight it out as well (that's the black Lotus team that's actually Lotus Cars and not the old Lotus F1 team, rather than Team Lotus, the old Lotus F1 team, which isn't really Lotus, but whom just bought Caterham, who make a car that actually used to be a Lotus but isn't any more). At one point Vitaly Petrov even shut out his German team mate Nick Heidfeld in turn 13, almost forcing him in the pits! Heidfeld got his own back though, by finishing in 7th, just ahead of the Russian driver in 8th.
Elsewhere in the grid, there was a huge amount of overtaking, thanks in part to that large DRS zone. Japanese madman Kamui Kobayashi started last after failing to set a qualifying time (the stewards allowed him to start the race because his practice laps were comfortably within 107% of the pole position lap time) and promptly made up fourteen places, five of them in the first lap, to finish in 10th position and get a single World Championship point. His Mexican team mate Sergio Pérez lost his front wing in the manic first lap, but made his way back up the grid to finish 13th. Sebastien Buemi also put in a strong performance and finished 9th, after starting in 16th place.
What else happened? I can't even remember. That's the long and short of it though. In a fortnight's time, the F1 circus is off to Circuit de Cataluña in Barcelona, Spain. This is a track that typically demands a good car in order to win and the teams usually bring major upgrade packages to this race. Three guesses who's getting pole position there then...
The full results and points table is here:
Race images are from F1Fanatic.co.uk and are not mine
0 comments:
Post a Comment