The Hamilton Spectator

Start to finish for Rosberg

- CHRIS LINES

BAKU, AZERBAIJAN — Formula One’s pit-to-driver radio restrictio­ns played a decisive role in Sunday’s European Grand Prix as Nico Rosberg got assistance in solving an engine-setting glitch and sailed away to an easy victory, while his Mercedes teammate and title rival Lewis Hamilton was frustrated at getting no help in fixing an identical problem and finished a distant fifth.

Rosberg’s win at the Baku street circuit pushed his lead over Hamilton in the drivers’ championsh­ip from nine points to 24.

Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel finished second, 16.6 seconds adrift of Rosberg, while Force India’s Sergio Perez passed Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen on the penultimat­e lap to take third.

Hamilton, who started the race tenth after crashing out in Saturday’s qualifying, was up to an effective fifth after just 10 laps and on a charge toward a potential fight with Rosberg when his engine picked up a “de-rating,” an inability to access the stored hybrid power.

Rosberg had switched to the same engine setting as Hamilton during the race, and suffered the same problem, but was quickly told by the team that the mode was problemati­c and he should switch back to the original setting.

Hamilton, however, had started the engine on that mode, so the team was at first unable to work out what was causing the performanc­e dip.

Even once the issue was diagnosed, and as Hamilton was begging over the radio for the team to tell him how to fix the problem, the team was not allowed to tell him.

Under the sport’s new rules designed to put more onus on driver skills, teams are banned from communicat­ing informatio­n to drivers about how to change engine modes.

“I had no idea, there were like 16 different engine positions and in those engine positions, like 20 positions, so I had no idea what problem I had, just low power,” Hamilton said.

The problem resolved itself late in the race, and Hamilton immediatel­y set the fastest lap, but by that time there was not enough time left to catch the cars in front, leaving the Briton to mull over the logic behind the radio restrictio­ns.

“I don’t see the benefit,” Hamilton said. “The FIA have made Formula One so technical. There were probably 100 different switch positions it could have been, at least 100, 200. There was no way for me to know, no matter how much I study that.”

Rosberg confirmed after the race he had the same problem, and calmly said: “It was just a matter of getting out of it with the right combinatio­n of switches.”

 ?? IVAN SEKRETAREV, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg steers his car to win the Formula One Grand Prix of Europe at the Baku circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan, on Sunday.
IVAN SEKRETAREV, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg steers his car to win the Formula One Grand Prix of Europe at the Baku circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan, on Sunday.

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