All posts by Michael Lamonato

Brazilian Grand Prix 2018 Strategy Report

12 Nov 2018

Race 20 – 71 Laps – 4.309km per lap – 305.909km race distance – low tyre wear

Brazilian GP F1 Strategy Report Podcast – our host Michael Lamonato is joined by Fernando Campos from the Fernando is Faster Than You Podcast

Lewis Hamilton got the chance to celebrate Mercedes’s fifth consecutive constructors championship from the top step of the podium, but it was pure luck that he took home the winners trophy.

The race win justly belonged to Max Verstappen after Red Bull Racing beautifully judged his strategy, but a moment of madness by Esteban Ocon as he attempted to unlap himself saw the two come together in a crash at turn two, losing the Dutchman his lead and leaving him unable to recover thanks to floor damage.

Mercedes4-Lewis-2000

THE BACKGROUND

Though the Hamilton-Mercedes championship double has long been something of an inevitability, the German marque has struggled significantly in recent races with tyre wear, the nadir being Hamilton’s 78-second defeat in Mexico City two weeks ago.

Ferrari, on the other hand, had rediscovered its mojo just as Mercedes had lost its own, and though winning the constructors title remained a long shot, the Italians could force the fight one more round if it could outscore the Silver Arrows by 13 points.

The intrigue of the weekend was therefore whether Mercedes’s famed self-analytical ability would be enough to reverse its competitive decline in the intervening time since Mexico or whether Ferrari could keep it honest. The answer was inconclusive — perhaps because the question hadn’t taken Red Bull Racing into account.

The Milton Keynes-based team played down the chances of dominant Mexico repeat. Though Interlagos is a high-altitude track, it isn’t nearly high enough to create the unique conditions that delivered it victory two weeks ago. What it didn’t expect, however, was for its tyre usage to be so much better than that of Mercedes and Ferrari that it didn’t matter anyway.

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QUALIFYING

Blistering on the supersoft — the softest compounds of Pirelli’s range comprising the medium, soft and supersoft tyres — during practice made starting the race on softs attractive, but Ferrari was the only team brave enough to attempt its first Q2 lap on the durable rubber. Mercedes and RBR both considered it, but the threat of imminent rain made it too great a risk in their opinion, handing what was thought to be a sizable advantage to the Scuderia.

The soft traded start-line grip for flexibility, however, and that proved to have far greater sway in Ferrari’s result, with both Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen struggling early in the race while those on supersofts excelled.

THE DECISIVE MOMENT

Truthfully the decisive moment of the race was Ocon’s lap-44 crash with Verstappen, depriving the Dutchman of what should have been a comfortable race win, but in the context of Verstappen powering into the lead of the first place, the grand prix pivoted on Hamilton’s lap-19 stop for fresh medium tyres.

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Hamilton was already suffering from blistering when Mercedes decided to switch to engage a 51-lap stint on mediums at least five laps ahead of Pirelli’s forecast pit window, hoping the fresh-tyre advantage would be enough to cover Verstappen’s stop, which was expected to come in the next 10 laps at maximum.

However, Red Bull Racing’s superb tyre usage turned the strategy model on its head. Verstappen ran to lap 35 — Ricciardo went even further, to lap 39 — with little drop-off in pace, which allowed both to switch straight to the soft-compound tyre for an aggressive final stint.

Verstappen emerged from the pits on lap 36 just 2.5 seconds behind Hamilton and easily passed the Briton with his grippier rubber on lap 40. He was almost four seconds up the found four laps later when he was hit by Ocon.

Hamilton protested that he still had life in his supersofts before his pit stop, but even so, Mercedes clearly had far inferior tyre wear compared to Red Bull Racing such that a 35-lap opening stint would’ve been unlikely in the extreme, meaning Verstappen was always in the box seat once he was up to second place.

FERRARI’S SOFTS DON’T PAY OFF

Vettel was considered favourite for victory by Mercedes thanks to his soft-compound tyre and P2 grid spot, but Ferrari’s pace was only lukewarm. Vettel had a so-so start, in part thanks to the lack of grip on the more durable tyre, and both he and Raikkonen struggled for the first 10 laps to extract much pace from the rubber relative to their supersoft-shod rivals.

Vettel admitted afterwards that Ferrari had overestimated the severity of wear on supersofts, meaning its tyre advantage was substantially reduced. The German also suffered sensor problems that meant he was unable to race aggressively, a mitigating factor for him finishing three places behind his teammate.

Raikkonen, to be fair to the Finn, had a solid race after the opening stint, eventually muscling his way past Valtteri Bottas on lap 44 and then defending steadfastly against Daniel Ricciardo despite the Australian running the fastest strategy.

Ferrari2-2000

GASLY PLAYS DIRTY WITH HARTLEY

In the latest chapter in strained relationships at Toro Rosso, Pierre Gasly admitted to ignoring team orders to let teammate Brendon Hartley past for around eight laps at the end of the race despite the two running different strategies.

Gasly spent most of the race out of the points after starting ninth on the supersoft tyre, whereas Hartley started on the mediums from P16 and made steady progress throughout the grand prix, rising to P11 before his first stop.

The Kiwi switched to the supersofts on lap 49, dropping behind his teammate, and despite having stronger pace and being less than two seconds behind the Frenchman for the final 10 laps, Gasly refused to yield, pointing out that Sergio Perez in 10th was too far up the road to be caught.

Hartley eventually got by with two laps remaining, as did Carlos Sainz, though Gasly says it’s only because he was running out of fuel that he ceded the two places.

Toro1-2000

Tyre data

Courtesy of Pirelli Motorsport

Pirelli1 Pirelli220-brazil-lap-chart

31 Oct 2018

With

Michael Lamonato

Michael Lamonato

Luke Smith

Luke Smith

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Episode 19 (2018) – Mexican Grand Prix

Our host Michael Lamonato  is joined by Luke Smith – F1 Editor, Crash.net to talk through the details of round 19 of the season.

Listen on Apple Podcasts or Listen on Spotify

Our guest Luke Smith, F1 Editor, Crash.net
Our guest Luke Smith, F1 Editor, Crash.net

If you like the podcast, please leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.

For full written report about the strategy plays in this race, and detailed data (including all the stints and tyre choices) click here. All of our previous F1 Strategy Report Podcasts are here.

Contact us on twitter @strategyreport. or at http://www.f1strategyreport.com/

Mexican Grand Prix 2018 Strategy Report

31 Oct 2018

Race 19 – 71 Laps – 4.304km per lap – 305.354km race distance – low tyre wear

Mexican GP F1 Strategy Report Podcast – our host Michael Lamonato is joined by Luke Smith – F1 Editor, Crash.net

Max Verstappen might’ve won the Mexican Grand Prix, but fourth-placed Lewis Hamilton stole the headlines by winning his fifth world championship in a difficult race for Mercedes.

Verstappen was in control for the duration of the race, but Red Bull Racing was never truly comfortable, with significant concern about tyre life dictating strategy throughout the field.

Merc2-2000

THE BACKGROUND

Mexico City sit at more than 2.2 kilometres above sea level, where the air is approximately 22 per cent less dense tan at the average racing circuit. This has a significant effect on aerodynamics — it’s not unusual to hear it said that the cars are running Monte Carlo aero kits but producing Monza-levels of downforce — which in turn make managing the tyres extremely difficult.

The lack of downforce means less grip, and if this lack of grip is poorly managed, tyre life can be diabolical. This was particularly the case with the hypersoft tyre, which Friday practice suggested would last barely a handful of laps in race conditions. Unfortunately for the teams, they had loaded up on hypersofts and brought very few ultrasofts or supersofts, meaning they had little choice but to save the more durable compounds for the race without giving their drivers the opportunity to try them out during Friday or Saturday practice.

The unusual conditions meant there was significant uncertainty about whether the fastest strategy would require one or two stops. The long and fast front straight means pit stop time loss is high, but the sort of extreme tyre management required to pull off a one-stop could have similarly lost significant time.

Ferrari1

QUALIFYING

Most teams were desperate to avoid the hypersoft tyre. The frontrunning teams had their six drivers use ultrasofts ins Q2 to set the purple-striped compound as their starting tyre, but the midfield is too closely contested to risk using slower compounds, so both Renaults and both Saubers from places seven to 10 committed to starting on the delicate pink tyre.

Force India tapped itself out of the battle for the top-10 shootout, deliberately sending Esteban Ocon and Sergio Perez out on the ultrasoft compound to qualify just on the cusp of Q3. The strategy was a success, with Ocon 11th and Perez 13h on the grid and therefore with free tyre choice for the start of the race.

Redbull3-2000

THE DECISIVE MOMENT

The decisive moment in the battle for the lead was the start. Polesitter Daniel Ricciardo, starting from the head of the grid for just the third time in his career and for the first time outside Monaco, bogged down with wheelspin and ceded places to teammate Max Verstappen, who took the lead, and Lewis Hamilton.

The Red Bull Racing RB14 had looked the class of the field in the unusual Mexico City conditions all weekend, but in clean air it was unstoppable. Verstappen was never really threatened for the rest of the race and had little trouble building and maintaining a healthy gap.

But while Verstappen sprinted away, Hamilton was able to use his superior straight-line speed to keep Ricciardo frustrated in third despite the Australian being notably quicker. Sebastian Vettel, however, had no trouble passing both with Ferrari’s impressive power output. He swept into second place and made slow but steady progress on Verstappen’s sizable lead.

It took Ricciardo until lap 47 to get past, when Mercedes’s excessive tyre wear was brought to bear on Hamilton’s strategy and forced him into a second stop, from which he exited the pits in fifth behind Kimi Raikkonen. This was effectively the end of Hamilton’s race as Mercedes had no new tyres to give him, opting instead for a set of lightly used ultrasofts. The management required to make it to the end with the purple rubber was immense, and he finished almost 80 seconds behind Verstappen.

Hamilton’s tyre change triggered Vettel to do likewise. Verstappen also made a stop, but his lead was so large that he maintained the lead.

Ricciardo was tactically left out after Red Bull Racing had inspected Verstappen’s worn supersoft tyres and found them to be capable of making it to the end of the race, but the Australian could also act as a buffer between his leading teammate and third-placed Sebastian Vettel, a task he executed admirably until a hydraulics failure eliminated him from the race — but by then Verstappen was unreachable anyway.

Merc4-2000

FORCE INDIA’S GAMBLE

The midfield is so tight that oftentimes this season cars starting just outside the top 10 on a more durable tyre have easily outmanoeuvred their top-10 midfield rivals who have been forced to start the race on qualifying rubber that lasts only a handful of laps. Force India expected this to be the case in Mexico.

Ocon’s race floundered from the get-go, losing part of his wing in a first-lap skirmish requiring an immediate pit stop. He ran until lap 30 on supersofts and then switched to ultrasofts thereafter, but it was too ambitious a run on the purple compound, and he was passed by Gasly, who was on supersofts, before the end of the race, losing him a points finish.

Perez’s race was more promising. He made it up to seventh before making his sole stop on lap 30 for a used set of ultrasofts, but he became embroiled in a battle with Charles Leclerc for eighth, costing him valuable time to Nico Hulkenberg in seventh. He got past him on lap 34, but he retired from the race three laps later.

Perez is adamant he could’ve finished seventh, but the supersoft tyres, once they had battled through an initial graining phase, should have been a better compound than the Mexican’s ultrasofts. Leclerc was on the same strategy as Hulkenberg, which could’ve brought him back into contention for eighth later in the race had Perez not retired.

Redbull5-2000

SUPERSOFT WAS A GOOD RACE TYRE

The solidness of the supersoft tyre as a racing compound was underlined by Stoffel Vandoorne, who made his sole stop off ultrasofts on lap 12 to finish the race with one long stint on supersofts, the red-marked tyre good enough to help him up from 15th on the grid to eighth behind Leclerc.

Pierre Gasly ran an unusual two-stop race, switching off new hypersofts on lap five — Toro Rosso figured most cars would be stopping early, so he may as well have the fastest tyre — onto new supersofts, and he took another set of new supersofts on lap 26. He was last after his final stop, but recovered places after both Haas drivers made their sole stops, by passing both Williams cars and Esteban Ocon, and by Brendon Hartley copping a penalty and letting him past as a result.

Redbull2-2000

HAAS’S NIGHTMARE

Haas has always struggled in Mexico, and for the third year in a row it was knocked out of qualifying in Q1. The American team has always struggled to generate maximum downforce, and the requirement to put as much downforce on the cars as possible in Mexico could be one explanation for their sustained difficulties.

The team attempted to run a long reverse strategy, starting on the supersoft compound and making a late change for ultrasofts, but neither Kevin Magnussen nor Romain Grosjean could build the sort of gap required over the midfield during the offset laps to make it work. The fell to last after their stops, where they remained to the end of the race.

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Tyre data

Courtesy of Pirelli Motorsport

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Pirelli1

19-mexico-lap-chart

23 Oct 2018

With

Michael Lamonato

Michael Lamonato

Nate Saunders

Nate Saunders

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Episode 18 (2018) – US Grand Prix

Our host Michael Lamonato  is joined by Nate Saunders from ESPN F1 to talk through the details of round 18 of the season.

Listen on Apple Podcasts

Our guest Nate Saunders from ESPN F1
Our guest Nate Saunders from ESPN F1

If you like the podcast, please leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.

For full written report about the strategy plays in this race, and detailed data (including all the stints and tyre choices) click here. All of our previous F1 Strategy Report Podcasts are here.

Contact us on twitter @strategyreport. or at http://www.f1strategyreport.com/