Sunday, April 12, 2015

Five things we learnt in China

Lewis Hamilton Nico Rosberg
Lewis Hamilton Nico Rosberg
Rosberg needs to know when he is beaten
Watch the extraordinary footage from the post-race press conference as Nico Rosberg lets rip at Lewis Hamilton and there’s one tell-tale glimpse of emotion that speaks loudest of all.
No, not the visible fury of the cold-eyed Rosberg, hard enough though his simmering anger is to ignore. Look instead at the smirk of Hamilton when he is asked to respond to his team-mate’s accusations. It's all he can do not to laugh out loud.
Rosberg hasn’t merely made himself sound absurd, accusing the actual race victor, i.e. the driver who reached the chequered flag quickest of all, of driving too slowly, but he has also made the cardinal sin of effectively admitting in public that Hamilton has got inside his head. The spiky defiance of 2014 has crumbled into what increasingly sounds like a beaten man. On and off the track, Rosberg has taken an absolute thrashing at the start of 2015 - and indeed ever since Hamilton destabilised Rosberg by claiming his rival admitted crashing into him on purpose at Spa in late August. Rosberg has never been quite the same since. 
To use the popular vernacular his head certainly wasn't in the right place this weekend.
It matters not a jot that - and this won’t be a popular view - Rosberg's complaints this weekend may have been valid. Mercedes themselves effectively confirmed as much by immediately heeding his radio call with an instruction to Hamilton to speed up. Unfortunately for Rosberg, who himself knows a thing or two about the dark arts of motor-racing, compromising a rival is a tactic as old as sport itself. Find a driver who says differently and introduce yourself to a serial loser.
As the race leader, Hamilton was fully entitled according to the law of the racing jungle to drive at whatever speed he wanted. And if he succeeded in winning whilst saving up his tyres and compromising his nearest rival in the World Championship then all the more credit to him for his dexterity. 
Game, set, and match to Hamilton.
In a heated post-race press conference Mercedes' Nico Rosberg accused team-mate Lewis Hamilton of compromising his race.In a heated post-race press conference Mercedes' Nico Rosberg accused team-mate Lewis Hamilton of compromising his race.
Mercedes have a car for usual summer seasons
So much for the theory that tyres would be the Achilles heel in the Mercedes package this year then.
Although Ferrari’s ability to make their soft tyres run longer than the W06 could manage in the extreme heat of Malaysia was the Silver Arrows’ undoing two weeks ago, China provided an altogether different perspective on both teams' relative strengths and weaknesses.
Not only were both Hamilton and Rosberg able to run the sort of stint lengths that were expected from Ferrari in order to nullify the threat from Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen, but both W06s seemed far more adept at switching on the harder medium compound at the start of their final stints. Easily missed after the post-race hullaballoo, but Vettel, barely a second behind Rosberg after their final stops, had fallen over five seconds behind before the Safety Car brought proceedings to a rather anti-climatic conclusion. Ferrari's age-old struggle to put heat into their tyres hasn't disappeared just yet.
The narrative may have been slightly distorted by the benefits Hamilton and, to lesser extent, Rosberg exclusively enjoyed from running in clean air, but the picture presented in China was far more nuanced than the straightforward ‘Ferrari are better on their tyres’ conclusion of Malaysia. Ultimately, it would appear that while Ferrari have a car better suited to hot conditions, the Mercedes W06 has the edge in cooler climes.
You win some, you lose some - and a summer heatwave in Europe could be the making or breaking of the title race.
Max Verstappen
Max Verstappen
Verstappen is a star in the making
No, not just a star, but in the words of Martin Brundle, a pundit not given to hyperbole, but "a potential superstar". The Toro Rosso youngster isn’t only super-fast, but, better still, he’s super-exciting. Even after just three races, Verstappen oozes talent and the type of box office aggression that the sport hasn’t born since Lewis Hamilton marked his F1 debut ten years ago by mugging the then-world champion Fernando Alonso into the first corner at Australia. And Hamilton, of course, had a McLaren to play with; Verstappen is ripping through the midfield in a car bereft of straightline speed, finding ways of overtaking where there ought to be none.
Unless his Red Bull contract is watertight, some big hitters will surely be knocking on Verstappen’s door soon, ready and willing to rip up any long-term plans they had for their driver line-up.
Lotus' Pastor Maldonado had a mixed race in China, eventually ending after a collision with McLaren's Jenson Button.Lotus' Pastor Maldonado had a mixed race in China, eventually ending after a collision with McLaren's Jenson Button.
Maldonado may be more expensive than his sponsorship is worth
It was only a matter of time before Lotus broke their points-scoring duck for 2015, although given that he had almost endured a full calendar year without troubling the scorers Romain Grosjean’s seventh-place finish this weekend couldn’t have come a moment too soon for the Frenchman.
It may not have been apparent in the opening two races, when the Lotus appeared to be a magnet for trouble and misfortune, but the Mercedes-powered E23  is very likely the fourth-fastest car on the grid, bettered only by the Mercedes, Ferrari and Williams. If so, that spells further ignominy for Red Bull, reduced to duelling with Sauber and Toro Rosso this weekend at the back end of the midfield pack - or at least it would do if only Pastor Maldonado would stop giving pay drivers a bad name.
In the interests of fairness, it must be acknowledged from the outset that the Venezuelan, whose wheel-perfect victory in Spain two years ago is surely destined to be considered one of the biggest one-off flukes in the history of sport, was the victim rather than perpetrator of his crash with Jenson Button.  But there the mitigation ends and the finger-pointing begins. As Grosjean’s unobserved cruise to seventh in identical machinery testified, Maldonado. shouldn’t have been anywhere near the two McLarens at that stage of the race. Instead, he would have been about ten places up the road but for taking his car for the wrong type of spin having already blown his race by pitting for a cup of tea with a couple of startled marshals rather than entering the pitlane correctly.
When does a pay driver stop paying his way? Right now, the difference between the amount prize money Maldonado may potentially cost Lotus and the sponsorship he brings the team must be an interesting quandary for a bright young thing with a degree in mathematics to grapple with.

Lewis Hamilton absolved of blame for China driving by Sky F1 pundits

Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton says he didn't compromise teammate Nico Rosberg's race in China.Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton says he didn't compromise teammate Nico Rosberg's race in China.
Sky F1’s pundits have absolved Lewis Hamilton of blame following Nico Rosberg’s accusation that the world champion "compromised" his Chinese Grand Prix.
Mercedes found themselves at the centre of a fresh intra-team row amid what would normally have been the jubilation of securing a one-two finish in Sunday’s race.
Having finished behind his team-mate, Rosberg claimed that Hamilton had put him into an “unnecessarily risky position” by not driving fast enough while in the lead approaching the second pit stops and, as a result, pushed him into the clutches of Sebastian Vettel.
Rosberg had already expressed his frustration with Hamilton over the team radio during the race when the German driver was first heard saying: “Lewis is driving very slowly to get him to speed up”, before adding: “If I go closer I destroy my tyres like in the first stint, that’s the problem”.
With a perplexed Hamilton defending his driving and tactics after the race, Sky Sports' F1’s pundits had their say on the matter and could not see what the Briton had done wrong.
“Lewis was leading the race so I think he was entitled to do whatever he wanted. If you want to change that, get in front of him," said Martin Brundle. 
"I think it is perfectly legitimate to back your team-mate and your main championship rival [into a car behind]. He’s got the high ground, he’s got track position, and if Rosberg had done it he would have been entitled to do the same thing as well.”
In a heated post-race press conference Mercedes' Nico Rosberg accused team-mate Lewis Hamilton of compromising his race.In a heated post-race press conference Mercedes' Nico Rosberg accused team-mate Lewis Hamilton of compromising his race.
Former world champion Damon Hill agreed that Hamilton had been fully within his rights to control the pace of the race at the front.
“Another Mercedes driver by the name of Juan Manuel Fangio said famously 'the goal is to win at the slowest possible speed',” Hill recalled.
“So I think he'd be proud of Lewis Hamilton today because he did exactly what he needed to do and he saved, he kept it in hand, he kept it under control and it was masterful. I think twice this weekend Nico has shown his frustrations and his irritation at finding someone else to blame and it is starting to look weak."
After missing out on pole position to Hamilton by less than a 10th of a second on Saturday, Rosberg blamed the Mercedes pitwall for putting him under “unnecessary pressure” ahead of his final Q3 lap by making him rush his out lap.
The German’s failure to overhaul Hamilton on Sunday means he has only once beaten his team-mate and title rival in a race since last July and Hill insists only Rosberg himself can change the narrative at Mercedes.  
“Nico is just shooting himself in the foot by showing the world he’s upset as if the world can do something about it,” the ’96 title winner said. “We can’t do anything about it – Nico has to outqualify Lewis, he has to take the fight and the high ground.”
Mercedes' Nico Rosberg says teammate Lewis Hamilton compromised his race by driving slowly and backing him into Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel. Mercedes' Nico Rosberg says teammate Lewis Hamilton compromised his race by driving slowly and backing him into Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel.
Fellow pundit Johnny Herbert agreed: “It’s the nature of sport. For him to fix this, he needs to beat Hamilton in qualifying. Then you lead it and start to control it. That’s all Lewis was doing, controlling it and looking after the tyres.”
However, while in agreement that Hamilton had done nothing wrong in Shanghai, Brundle admitted it was difficult to be too hard on Rosberg given he appears to have been told by Mercedes' hierachy to start providing his team-mate with stiffer competition again.
“If Nico had scuttled off and said nothing, we’d have said ‘that’s weak – why’s he not fighting back?’” Brundle suggested. “He’s been playing the nice guy in the first two races and we categorically know he’s been told to stop all that, it’s just feeding Lewis’s confidence.
“But he’s got to come out and make as much smell as he can.”
Mercedes' feuding drivers now prepare to return to the scene of the most intense battle in their three seasons as team-mates, Bahrain, for round four of a 2015 season which Hamilton currently controls from out front.


Thursday, April 9, 2015

Chinese GP P1: Lewis Hamilton fastest from Nico Rosberg

Lewis Hamilton: Fastest in first practice
Lewis Hamilton: Fastest in first practice
Lewis Hamilton was fastest in opening practice for the Chinese Grand Prix on Friday ahead of Nico Rosberg and Sebastian Vettel.
The defending champion lapped the 5.451km Shanghai International Circuit in a time of 1:39.033 to go 0.541s faster than his Mercedes team-mate, with Malaysian GP winner Sebastian Vettel third fastest for Ferrari.

Live Formula 1

April 10, 2015
Vettel's success has raised the possibility that Ferrari might offer Mercedes a significant title challenge this season, although general consensus has suggested that the tyre durability of the Scuderia's SF15-T in Sepang's extreme heat was the deciding factor.
Logic therefore follows that Ferrari may find the going more difficult in this weekend's cooler climes, although the gap from Vettel to Hamilton - 1.5s - was, give a take a tenth, the same as it was at the corresponding stage two weeks ago.
A clearer picture will emerge when teams embark upon qualifying and race simulations in second practice but with Kimi Raikkonen's Ferrari fourth fastest overall, early indications are in line with most people's predictions.
In fact, the session itself was largely predictable and incident-free, besides a couple of low-speed spins early on. Even so, Sauber will be happy that Felipe Nasr set the fifth fastest time ahead of Red Bull pair Daniel Ricciardo and Daniil Kvyat, with Toro Rosso's Carlos Sainz next up in eighth.
Williams pair Valtteri Bottas and Felipe Massa completed the top ten ahead of Pastor Maldonado (Lotus) and Max Verstappen (Toro Rosso).
Sebastian Vettel: Third fastest overall
Sebastian Vettel: Third fastest overall
Jenson Button was next up in 13th, with his McLaren-Honda about 2.8s off the ultimate pace, while Fernando Alonso was down in 17th spot. The Spaniard was two places behind debutant Jolyon Palmer, one of the early spinners but the GP2 champion recovered to set a 1:41.967 for Lotus.
Second practice starts at 7am BST.
Practice One Timesheet
1. Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, 1:39.033
2. Nico Rosberg, Mercedes, 1:39.574
3. Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari, 1:40.157
4. Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari, 1:40.661
5. Felipe Nasr, Sauber, 1:41.012
6. Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull, 1:41.029
7. Daniil Kvyat, Red Bull, 1:41.097
8. Carlos Sainz, Toro Rosso, 1:41.112
9. Valtteri Bottas, Williams, 1:41.303
10. Felipe Massa, Williams, 1:41.304
11. Pastor Maldonado, Lotus, 1:41.335
12. Max Verstappen, Toro Rosso, 1:41.575
13. Jenson Button, McLaren, 1:41.845
14. Marcus Ericsson, Sauber, 1:41.918
15. Jolyon Palmer, Lotus, 1:41.967
16. Sergio Perez, Force India, 1:42.141
17. Fernando Alonso, McLaren, 1:42.161
18. Nico Hulkenberg, Force India, 1:42.184
19. Will Stevens, Manor, 1:45.379
20. Roberto Merhi, Manor, 1:46.443

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Anthony Davidson believes Ferrari have closed on Mercedes

Anthony Davidson believes Ferrari have closed the gap to Mercedes
Anthony Davidson believes Ferrari have closed the gap to Mercedes
Anthony Davidson believes Ferrari have made “huge inroads” into the Mercedes’ advantage, but predicts the Silver Arrows will “bounce back” in China.
Sebastian Vettel’s maiden win for Ferrari at the Malaysia Grand Prix ended Mercedes’ run of victories which stretched back to Monza last September.
“I am sure they are going to be bouncing back at the next race,” said the Sky F1 pundit said of Mercedes.
“They are clearly licking their wounds after Malaysia, but it is a very unique track and set of conditions that face you there and I think perhaps when we get to a more traditional event – as in weather conditions and track layout that challenges the tyres in a different way – we might see it return back to status quo.
“But one thing for sure is that Ferrari have made huge inroads into reducing the gap to the champions and who knows, this could be the start of a season long title fight.”
After Melbourne failed to deliver a thrilling start to the new season, Davidson believes F1 was “back to its best” with an engrossing race at Sepang.
“It was great for the sport to see a real competitor and some taking the fight to Mercedes like Ferrari – and what a great brand to do it,” he added.
“It was so good for the sport and it was great to see Vettel, having switched teams from Red Bull to Ferrari, taking the victory in Malaysia.
“It was F1 back to its best and as a fan and a pundit I was really happy that F1 put itself in a good light again after Melbourne which, honestly speaking, wasn’t F1’s finest moment. But every race is different and I think the general public have to appreciate that.
“Unfortunately Melbourne is the start of the season and all eyes are on that race and it wasn’t the most exciting of races, we had multiple cars drop out and it looked a bit sorry for itself.
“But Malaysia, second race in, it was a massive turnaround and once again a lesson not to judge a book by its cover and F1 was back to its very best.”
A round up of the best rants, instructions and celebrations heard over the team radio during the Malaysia Grand Prix. A round up of the best rants, instructions and celebrations heard over the team radio during the Malaysia Grand Prix.
Ferrari’s ability to look after their tyres meant they were able to make two stops compared to Mercedes’ three and even then, the Silver Arrows drivers still reported fading rubber over the radio.
“It was a big concern for them during the days of the blown floor don’t forget, tyre-wear was always high on the agenda at Mercedes and we used to see them struggle more in the race than they did on outright qualifying pace compared to the likes of Red Bull,” said Davidson.
“But Malaysia has always been so hard on the tyres, you have those long progressive corners that tighten up as you’re braking, in that extreme heat it really pushes the tyres beyond their limits.
“You only have to look back at last year’s results to see how close the opposition were relatively to Mercedes compared to the rest of the season and it looked like the anomaly. Although they won, they were definitely closer to their opposition than they were in places like Bahrain, Barcelona and all the rest of the races.
“With Nico they had a pretty dominant win in Melbourne and then they went to Malaysia and they had someone in their mirrors pretty much the whole race, albeit a couple of seconds down the road. So it didn’t seem even back then in their most dominant fashion like their strongest circuit, so it should be no surprise that the likes of Ferrari or someone kind on their tyres could be close or even topple them on that track. So let’s see where we are at the next race in terms of general competition at the sharp end of F1. I will be fascinated to see how it turns out.”

Toro Rossos could be rebranded in Renault-themed yellow livery

Spot the difference: Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo in the Toro Rosso and Red Bull cars at the Malaysia GP
Spot the difference: Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo in the Toro Rosso and Red Bull cars at the Malaysia GP
Toro Rosso could be rebranded in a yellow livery to give Renault greater visibility in F1, according to Red Bull consultant Helmut Marko.
Renault’s relationship with Red Bull, the parent team to junior outfit Toro Rosso, has floundered since the start of F1’s new turbo era and the group confirmed last month that they were considering leaving F1 at the end of the season.
Marko’s remarks will be seen as an attempt to take the sting out of suggestions that Renault could buy Toro Rosso – a prospect which Christian Horner, the Red Bull team boss, admitted in Malaysia would likely “force” the former world champions out of the sport.
"Renault are spending a lot of MONEY on this power unit – not as much as Mercedes but a significant amount – and are confronted with the same issues that we (Red Bull) have: their F1 involvement has to pay off," Marko told Formula1.com.
"Add to that that Renault feels under-represented on the marketing side so there are considerations to either buy Toro Rosso or more likely give them a yellow livery to have a better marketing platform."
Red Bull and Renault, partners during the team’s run of four successive championship doubles at the turn of the decade, have engaged in an astonishing war of words since the start of the year when it immediately became apparent that both Mercedes and Ferrari boasted a significant power advantage.
After Horner described Renault as being in “a bit of a mess”, Renault chief Cyril Abiteboul hit back by describing Red Bull Technical Director Adrian Newey as a “liar” – a slur he subsequently apologised for to Sky F1.
Natalie Pinkham is joined by former F1 driver John Watson and ex-Red Bull engineer Mark Hutcheson to reflect on the 2015 Malaysia Grand PrixNatalie Pinkham is joined by former F1 driver John Watson and ex-Red Bull engineer Mark Hutcheson to reflect on the 2015 Malaysia Grand Prix
Meanwhile, Toro Rosso, where the likes of Sebastian Vettel, Daniel Ricciardo and Daniil Kvyat have graduated from, have admitted they would be open to a Renault takeover.
Sitting alongside both Horner and Abiteboul in the team bosses’ press conference in Sepang, Franz Tost confirmed: "I think this would be a fantastic opportunity for Toro Rosso to make the next step forward because the team wants to be established in the future within the first five in the constructors’ championship. To be part of a manufacturer – to be owned by a manufacturer – would be exactly [the] step forward the team needs to be established in the first five."
Adding to the intrigue, Marko has himself also warned that Dietrich Mateschitz, the owner of both Red Bull and Toro Rosso, will lose his "passion for F1" and quit the sport unless the current regulations are overhauled. 

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Zoom in to purchase

Zoom: Personal Images and Insights from the Stars of F1, the third official book of the charity auction of photographs taken by the stars of the sport, is now available to purchase.
The book contains images which were taken by all the F1 drivers and team bosses over the course of the 2014 season and were auctioned in January in aid of Great Ormond Street Hospital Children’s Charity (GOSHCC).
This year’s Zoom auction took place at the InterContinental London Park Lane on Friday 16th January. The photographs were auctioned for GOSHCC in front of a star-studded guest list, including famous faces from the world of F1 such as Bernie Ecclestone, Christian Horner and Geri Halliwell, Claire Williams, Eric Boullier, Graeme Lowdon ans Adrian Newey.
These photos give a unique behind-the-scenes insight into the lives of the world’s most famous racing drivers. It meant subjects covered were as diverse as Jenson Button’s view of his ‘office’ to Toto Wolff’s on-the-grid selfie with colleague Paddy Lowe in Bahrain. And members of the Sky Sports F1 team were also asked to get involved, with the likes of Martin Brundle, Damon Hill and David Croft sending in their own snapshot of the season.
In conjunction with Zoom and ahead of the event, Sky Sports F1 ran a competition asking fans to send in their favourite photographs of 2014 via Facebook, Twitter and email for a chance to win a fabulous set of prizes courtesy of Zoom and Nikon. We were inundated with your snaps and Mark Timms was judged as the winner with his photograph of young Ferrari fans.
Zoom charity auction
Zoom charity auction
Mark's winning image was printed and framed alongside all the other pictures for the 2015 Zoom charity auction but that’s not all as the image has also been added to the new Zoom book, immortalised forever for fans and readers alike.
The 124-page book retails at £15 and includes all 52 photographs from Zoom 2015 alongside descriptions of each image in the photographer’s own words.
The book also contains a foreword by Formula One’s chief executive Bernie Ecclestone. “It has all been done for a wonderful cause,” he says. “You are getting a glimpse into a side of F1 that isn’t shown on television and as you will see, it isn’t all about fast cars and champagne.”
Christian Sylt, founder of Zoom, added: “I’d like to thank everyone who has helped make Zoom possible, especially our partners, the teams and drivers, Bernie Ecclestone and everyone else who took a photo. Fans who missed out on a chance to bid for a signed print can still support Zoom by buying this book and it’s an ideal gift for anyone interested in F1.”

F1 Midweek Report - Malaysia 2015

Natalie Pinkham is joined by former F1 driver John Watson and ex-Red Bull engineer Mark Hutcheson to reflect on the Malaysia Grand PrixNatalie Pinkham is joined by former F1 driver John Watson and ex-Red Bull engineer Mark Hutcheson to reflect on the Malaysia Grand Prix
Sebastian Vettel has his mojo back and Ferrari exploited a chink in Mercedes’ armour, according to F1 Midweek REPORT guests Mark Hutcheson and John Watson.
After being swamped by team-mate Daniel Ricciardo in his final year at Red Bull as he relinquished his world championship crown to Lewis Hamilton, Vettel marked only his second race for new team Ferrari with a faultless drive in Malaysia to beat Hamilton to bring the new season to life.
“It was refreshing,” agreed former F1 driver Watson, a veteran of over 150 races. “Vettel has his mojo back. He lost it in 2014 but now he has it back. He has a car which suits his driving style and he made it work in Malaysia.”
But was it a race won by Ferrari or a grand prix lost by Mercedes?
“I’m not persuaded that, when things are slightly out of jilter, Mercedes are as good at thinking on their feet as other teams,” noted Watson.
“After the Friday running, Mercedes would have known that they wouldn’t have it easy,” argued Hutcheson. “But we need to be careful. Mercedes for sure still have an advantage.”
The show, featuring guest appearances from Sky F1’s Martin Brundle and Ted Kravitz, also discusses cracks in the relationship between Renault and Red Bull, Fernando Alonso’s explanation for his crash in testing and the rate of progress at McLaren following their switch to Honda power.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Sebastian Vettel brings 2015 to life and proves he's the real deal

Vitality. This, by most observers’ perceptions is what Sebastian Vettel and Ferrari breathed back into a sport that had been straining under the weight of unrealistic expectation prior to Malaysia.
After moribund premonitions about the 2015 season a fortnight ago, F1 burst back into life in the searing heat of Malaysia because unexpected victories always inspire human expression.
First off there was joy. By simply swapping teams and becoming the underdog, in victory Sebastian Vettel was celebrated rather than booed as he leaped onto the top step in Sepang. 6000 miles away in Maranello, the centre of Ferrari’s beating heart, church bells were pealing. Down in the pitlane below Vettel, amongst the throng, we saw grown men crying. No doubt this was the case all over Italy.
Thirty-four races is a long time for the Scuderia to wait between wins and next to us James Allison was visibly moved whilst hanging on the every word of the man who drove his creation to the chequered flag. By all accounts Maurizio Arrivabene’s racing team have had an extra 100 million Euros added to their yearly budget by Ferrari. What does that tell you about their hopes for the months ahead?
There was also frustration. Lewis Hamilton’s annoyance with his race engineer Pete Bonnington talking to him while cornering encapsulated the emotion of an afternoon that even had Paddy Lowe flustered. The champions were beaten in the words of Vettel “fair and square” so much so that Hamilton, realising this, was able to put aside his dissatisfaction and enjoy the winner’s moment with him, sat together atop the podium.
Indeed the nature of the result raised pulse rates throughout the paddock and has perhaps shifted the paradigm for this season. Prior to the race it seemed Red Bull had simply come to terms with the Sisyphean task of overhauling Mercedes this year. They grumbled that it might force them to rethink their involvement due to the necessity of sporting success to the parallel business of marketing.
But Ferrari’s victory has already encouraged Renault to take a more positive approach in the media concluding that: “Mercedes can be caught if all the ingredients are there.” You would think that if the team and its engine manufacturer, with a budget their size, can put aside their public bickering and direct their energies in a more positive manner then they too could be a challenger sooner rather than later - especially as they have more engine tokens left to spend than any of the others.
McLaren, to their credit have spun the world a magnificent tale akin to an asthmatic giant struggling to find his inhaler. They have put a brave face on their woes and through gritted teeth and a wry smile ‘Big Ron’ exclaimed that their partner Honda will relish the engineering challenge of catching up. They’re not whinging.
So just how long will it take the others to catch Mercedes with the regulations set out and stretching in front of them towards the end of the decade? That is the overriding question but what this weekend taught us is that the sport doesn’t require gimmicks to demonstrate that it’s in good health. It doesn’t need artificial ways to peg the best back. F1’s mantra is to push the technology boundaries further. It requires the dedication and belief of an engineering team that, with good ideas and solid execution can build a car that can challenge anyone.
That’s what happened in Malaysia. Hope was born out of hard work. Just as Vettel was being criticised by Bernie Ecclestone for not doing enough to promote the sport when he was world champion, he rose again. He’s not on Twitter and has preferred not to wallow in the trappings of fame. So what? Isn’t that all besides the point anyway? All he’s interested in doing is winning races.
Quietly and behind closed doors he’s helped precipitate change at Maranello, breathed new life into Ferrari and in doing so, into the sport. There’s nothing artificial about that. That is why he’s a great champion and that’s why, contrary to the doom mongers predictions, F1 2015 isn’t ready to flatline just yet.
SL