All posts by Michael Lamonato

Italian Grand Prix 2018 Strategy Report

4 Sep 2018

Race 14 – 53 Laps – 5.793km per lap – 306.720km race distance – low tyre wear

Italian GP F1 Strategy Report Podcast – our host Michael Lamonato is joined by Luca Manacorda from FormulaPassion.it

MERCEDES MUSCLE FERRARI OUT OF HOME WIN

Ferrari failed to convert its first front-row lockout since 2000 into a victory for either pole-sitter Kimi Raikkonen or championship contender Sebastian Vettel, with Lewis Hamilton and his Mercedes pit wall outfoxing both en route to a decisive victory.

The Scuderia was strategically hamstrung, however, after Vettel hit Hamilton on the first lap and tumbled down the order, leaving the then leading Raikkonen to fend off both Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas in tactical thriller that ultimately left the partisan home crowd heartbroken.

Merc1-2000

THE BACKGROUND

Ferrari’s strong pace in Belgium was a precursor to a competitive showing at its home race in Italy, with both Spa-Francorchamps and Monza rewarding power above all else.

Friday practice bore this out, though it was closer than some expected — part of Mercedes’s problems in Belgium was down to tyre wear, which sprung from the car’s poor traction out of slow corners. With so few slow corners in Monza, the gap had shrunk between the frontrunners.

Both Ferrari and Vettel started the weekend down in the championship standings but with momentum. The Scuderia had gone without a home win since Fernando Alonso’s 2010 triumph, but both were confident of breaking the drought.

Did the pressure of performing at home to give the title hopes of team and driver get to Ferrari and Vettel? Only they know the answer for certain.

Redbull4-2000

QUALIFYING

Ferrari’s first true error came in qualifying, when Kimi Raikkonen was given the benefit of starting both his Q3 laps behind Sebastian Vettel, thereby benefitting from his slipstream on Monza’s long straights. Vettel said he and Raikkonen take it on turn to leave pit lane first, but there was some conjecture about whether this was on a per-weekend basis or run by run.

Whatever the case, that Ferrari chose not to preference Vettel over Raikkonen despite the latter being realistically well outside the championship frame was a strategic error, innocuous though it may have seemed at the time given the result was a front-row lockout.

Vettel was obviously frustrated at the end of the session, and his eagerness to get past his teammate at the first and then, fatefully, fourth turns was perhaps derived from this hangover of frustration.

THE DEFINING MOMENT

Though Ferrari’s qualifying strategy was a contributing factor, its home-race collapse was triggered by Vettel’s botched attempt to defend second place from Lewis Hamilton.

Vettel had an ambitious look down the inside of Raikkonen at turn four, but in doing so he opened the door for Hamilton to cruise around his outside. Perhaps fretting about his error and lacking some downforce tucked in behind Raikkonen, the German slid slightly wide out of the left-hand corner and hit Hamilton, sending himself into a spin that left him 18th.

Raikkonen still held the lead, however, even after Hamilton briefly seized first place at the safety car restart, but from there Mercedes was able to use both its cars strategically against the Finn to prevent him from winning his first race in more than five years.

Hamilton was shadowing Raikkonen with relative ease in the first stint, so Ferrari opted to pre-empt an undercut by bringing in Kimi on lap 21. Mercedes ordered Hamilton to do the opposite, and the Briton stayed out hoping his used supersofts could build a pit-stop buffer over the new soft-shod Ferrari.

It soon became obvious this wasn’t going to be the case, however, but Mercedes left Hamilton out until lap 28, in part because Daniel Ricciardo’s Red Bull Racing car had stopped by the side of the road — a virtual safety car would’ve meant Hamilton could pit and jump Raikkonen, though the VSC was ultimately not triggered — and partly to give him a greater tyre offset against Raikkonen.

The Briton was brought in at the end of lap 28, just in time for Raikkonen to catch new race leader Valtteri Bottas, who hadn’t yet stopped. Mercedes directed Bottas to keep his compatriot behind him at all costs, which allowed Hamilton to make up his six-second deficit in just four laps.

By the time Bottas made his own pit stop at the end of lap 35, Raikkonen had cooked his softs, with blisters erupting on his left-rear tyre. His lap times improved in the clear air, but his defence on the worn rubber lasted only nine laps. Hamilton scythed past on lap 45 and sprinted into the distance.

Bottas’s deployment as a road block hampered his own race, dropping him into fourth behind Max Verstappen after his stop. Though he was substantially faster, Verstappen defended hard — too hard, in fact, earning himself a five-second penalty that lost the Dutchman the place to Bottas anyway.

Vettel also gained a place through Verstappen’s penalty. The German switched to the soft tyre at the end of lap one when he stopped for a new front wing. It gave Ferrari the opportunity to attempt to run to the end, but the tyre was put through too much stress as Vettel scythed his way through the midfield and blistered, requiring a change on lap 36.

Redbull1-2000

FORCE INDIA GOES LONG, SAINZ POWERLESS

The midfield battle was particularly close all weekend but was ultimately decided along engine lines.

Carlos Sainz was a good example of the power disparity, the Spaniard starting seventh but finishing ninth on the road — eighth after Romain Grosjean was disqualified — after losing places to Esteban Ocon and Sergio Perez, who started eighth and 14th.

Ocon made his way past the Renault on lap 18 for sixth, and it took Perez until only until lap 24 to catch and pass Sainz for seventh. Carlos was powerless to defend down Monza’s long straights.

All three drivers went long on the supersoft tyres, with Ocon taking his set to lap 38 and Perez and Sainz stopping one lap later. Perez’s pace was especially impressive given the Mexican’s starting position — he was within three seconds of Ocon when the two made their pit stops despite his car carrying damage from a lap-one skirmish with Kevin Magnussen.

GROSJEAN PRE-EMPTED UNDERCUT

Romain Grosjean’s 2018 renaissance continued with strong sixth-place qualification and finish, notwithstanding his car being disqualified for a technical infringement after the race.

Grosjean ran a conventional strategy, stopping for a new set of soft tyres on lap 23 anticipating an Ocon undercut. When Ocon went long, Grosjean was forced to knuckle down for a long series of consistent laps on the slower tyre to ensure his compatriot wouldn’t jump him when Force India brought him in.

The result was a satisfying four-second buffer, which was enough to stave off Ocon’s late-race assault on the position despite the tyre offset — though it all counted for nought after his disqualification.

Ferrari4-2000

Tyre data

Courtesy of Pirelli Motorsport

Pirelli2 Pirelli1 14-italy-lap-chart

29 Aug 2018

With

Michael Lamonato

Michael Lamonato

Sean Kelly

Sean Kelly

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Episode 13 (2018) – Belgian Grand Prix

Our host Michael Lamonato  is joined by Sean Kelly – the Virtual Statman to talk through the details of round 13 of the season.

Listen on Apple Podcasts

Our guest Sean Kelly - the Virtual Statman
Our guest Sean Kelly – the Virtual Statman

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/

Belgian Grand Prix 2018 Strategy Report

29 Aug 2018

Race 13 – 44 Laps – 7.004km per lap – 308.052km race distance – medium tyre wear

Belgian GP F1 Strategy Report Podcast – our host Michael Lamonato is joined by Sean Kelly – the Virtual Statman

VETTEL POWERS TO IMPORTANT BELGIAN GRAND PRIX VICTORY

Sebastian Vettel recorded a crucial win at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, breaking Mercedes’s stranglehold on the Belgian race and trimming his championship deficit to Lewis Hamilton down to 17 points.

The vanquished Hamilton lamented that he was powerless to repel the resurgent Vettel despite starting from pole position, and the Briton called on his team to find more engine power or greater chassis performance to overcome Ferrari’s confident pace advantage at the head of the field.

Ferrari2-2000

 

THE BACKGROUND

Ferrari arrived at the Belgian Grand Prix knowing it had been a Mercedes fortress since the introduction of the 2014 turbo-hybrid power unit regulations. The Silver Arrows was peerless at the flat-our circuit, owning all four pole positions and winning all bar the 2014 race, which it gifted to Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo after Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton crashed into each other on the second lap.

Mercedes brought its third and final power unit upgrade to Spa in an attempt to maintain its streak, but so too did Ferrari bring an updated engine. The Italian team dominated free practice, suggesting it had kept its nose ahead in the power stakes, and it exhibited superior long-run pace to boot.

Redbull2-2000

 

QUALIFYING

Rain undid Ferrari and Vettel’s victory chances in Germany and Hungary before the midseason break, with Sebastian crashing out in the rain-affected German Grand Prix and missing out on the vital pole position in Budapest one week later.

The German therefore would’ve been extremely disappointed to see his car’s certain pace advantage washed away for the third race weekend in succession when a brief but heavy deluge flooded the track just in time for Q3. Hamilton duly claimed pole position.

Ferrari still emerged with a marginal advantage, however, with Kimi Raikkonen qualifying sixth — the Finn hadn’t been sufficiently fuelled to complete a final lap in the chaos of the sudden arrival of rain — whereas Valtteri Bottas in the second Mercedes was to start from 17th with a power unit penalty.

The Scuderia would have the tactical advantage of squeezing Hamilton between two strategies — or at least that was the plan.

Ferrari1-2000

 

SLIPSTREAM STRATEGY

Carnage unfolded on the first lap, with Nico Hulkenberg rear-ending Fernando Alonso, who then careered into Charles Leclerc and catapulted into the air, smashing through Daniel Ricciardo’s rear wing as he thudded back down to earth. Ricciardo then nudged into Raikkonen, who picked up a puncture that resulted in race-ending damage to his car. All five retired before the end of the race.

That left Vettel strategically on his own, but he was already wresting control from Hamilton further up the road. He slipstreamed the Mercedes along the Kemmel straight and got the job done in the braking zone.

He was only threatened thereafter twice: first on the safety car restart, which Hamilton botched by getting too punchy too early at the bus stop, putting him out of slipstream range for the first turn, and at the sole pit stop window.

Crash-2000

 

HAMILTON’S UNDERCUT

Mercedes pulled the undercut trigger on lap 21 with a 3.498 -second deficit to Vettel. On new soft tyres Hamilton set two purple sectors on his out-lap, applying pressure to the race leader.

Vettel was ordered to pit at the end of the next lap, and he bettered Hamilton’s in-lap by half a second. His pit crew got his tyres changed in 0.482 seconds faster than Mercedes executed Hamilton’s stop, and he emerged from pit lane 1.359 seconds ahead of Hamilton.

It was a solid effort from team and driver to stave off the threat.

As a hypothetical, had the two pit stops run to the same time, Vettel’s advantage would’ve been only 0.877 seconds, which would’ve made Vettel’s in lap and Verstappen’s presence on track the two defining elements of the pit stop window.

Mercedes3-2000

 

A QUIET TOP 10

The battle inside the top 10 was fairly sedate in Belgium once Vettel had gotten the job done on Hamilton. Valtteri Bottas made his irresistible climb to the tail of the frontrunners, as he was expected to do with machinery vastly superior to that employed by the midfielders, but there was little racing to be had between teammates at Force India and Haas, with Sergio Perez and Esteban Ocon leading home Romain Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen.

The battle for ninth and 10th was an exception, however, with Pierre Gasly battling with Marcus Ericsson for the minor points-paying places.

Gasly was theoretically disadvantaged by his Honda power unit when compared with Ericsson’s Ferrari motor, but the Frenchman had the advantage of track position.

Ericsson, having qualified outside the top 10, had the advantage of starting on the soft tyre, however, meaning he would switch onto the fast supersoft for his final stint. Gasly, having started 10th, would be forced to do the opposite.

By half distance Ericsson was well within undercut range, but the Toro Rosso pit wall saw a strategic opportunity to extinguish the threat. On lap 25 Gasly was brought in, pre-empting Sauber’s undercut.

The Frenchman dropped to 11th behind teammate Brendon Hartley, who duly let him past. Ericsson, who had little choice but to follow suit, made his own stop on lap 26. He likewise fell behind the Kiwi, but this time Hartley obstinately defended for two laps, costing Ericsson precious seconds and the best of his new tyres.

Gasly was eight seconds up the road by the time Ericsson muscled his way through, and he maintained the gap the chequered flag.

Redbull3-2000

 

SAINZ STRUGGLES WITHOUT SOFTS

Carlos Sainz, starting from P19 with new power unit elements, suffered a difficult afternoon on the third medium-supersoft strategy. Stoffel Vandoorne was the only other driver to use the medium compound, and neither driver fared well.

Sainz’s progress was tortuous. He made it past Brendon Hartley’s Honda-powered Toro Rosso at the restart on lap five, but he went to lap 21 stuck behind Lance Stroll’s Mercedes-powered Williams, lacking the tyre grip and engine performance to make a move.

An undercut onto the supersoft tyre got him ahead of the Canadian, but he was thereafter stuck behind Stoffel Vandoorne for three laps and then the second Williams of Sergey Sirotkin for another six laps before breaking into clear air in 11th place on lap 33, by which time he was too far away from the top 10 to make an impact on the point-paying places.

 

Tyre data

Courtesy of Pirelli Motorsport

Pirelli1 Pirelli2

 

 

13-belgium-lap-chart

31 Jul 2018

With

Michael Lamonato

Michael Lamonato

Phill Tromans

Phill Tromans

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Episode 12 (2018) – Hungarian Grand Prix

Our host Michael Lamonato  is joined byPhill Tromans from the “For F1’s Sake” Podcast to talk through the details of round 12 of the season.

Listen on Apple Podcasts

Our guest Phill Tromans from the "For F1's Sake" Podcast
Our guest Phill Tromans from the “For F1’s Sake” Podcast

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

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/