Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Ferrari pitstop timing puts brakes on Vettel’s chances

- Raja Sen has been writing about Formula One since 2004.

Lewis Hamilton won the race 17 seconds ahead of Vettel, who was lapping 1.5 seconds faster than Hamilton’s Mercedes. This is damning evidence. It is shameful that the Ferrari drivers could not muscle past and dominate this race. Ferrari failed, and so did their Number One driver.

To recap, Hamilton was ahead by less than 7 seconds when he stopped for tyres. A pitstop in Hungary takes about 20 seconds, soheemerge­d13.5secondsbe­hind Vettel and, on new rubber, was expected to reel him in. Incredibly enough, Vettel extended his lead at the front, despite worn tyres. If he’d stopped two laps later when 15 seconds ahead, he could rejoin five seconds behind Hamilton and, on new ultrasoft tyres, soon fill his mirrors with scarlet. The Ferraripac­e,evenonoldt­yresand a slower tyre compound, was too good to be true. We faced the mouth-watering prospect of 30 laps of Hamilton having to defend against a galloping Ferrari.

Ferrari, perhaps unused to being the faster team, made the incorrect — and gluttonous — call to let Vettel go much longer before stopping, hoping their faster-tyre advantage would be even more acute in the second half of the race. Instead of stopping Vettel as soon as he hit traffic and start losing time to Hamilton, they allowed not only Hamilton to close in but also his teammate Valtteri Bottas. Following a slow stop, Vettel came out behind the Finn and spent too many laps finding a way past, wrecking his chances at chasing down Hamilton despite a stunningly fast car.

Vettel looked ordinary out there. Ferrari flubbed strategy and made a clumsy stop, but the German should have passed Bottas, on severely old tyres, in less than five laps time. Hungary may be a tough track to overtake on, but this is where we needed to see canny racecraft and something special from Vettel. Instead, we witnessed mere desperatio­n.

Picture Hamilton in the same situation. Would he have found a way past a slower number-two driver much earlier? Would he have caught the race-leader and challenged for the win? The answers are absolute, which is why he’s leading the world championsh­ip. Ordinary doesn’t cut it.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Lewis Hamilton celebrates on the podium after winning the race ahead of Sebastian Vettel.
REUTERS Lewis Hamilton celebrates on the podium after winning the race ahead of Sebastian Vettel.

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