Rosberg answers critics as Ferrari fails to execute

By Rodney Gordon / Expert

Nico Rosberg finally stemmed the tide and took a convincing pole position and victory at the Spanish Grand Prix.

Before the race his Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton was voted ‘most likely to cause headaches at Turn 1′, but when he spun his wheels on launch and was then mugged from behind by the second-row starters the result for Rosberg was all but assured.

Despite his triumph Rosberg still trails Hamilton by 20 points. After missing pole by only 0.04 seconds in China, Nico has been waiting for a change of fortune and most thought that getting the job done in qualifying would set him up for a maiden victory this season.

Hamilton finished a distant second, but things could have been far more difficult for the reigning champion had Scuderia played their best strategic hand.

In recent times Ferrari have managed to turn alternative race strategies to their advantage, snatching an unlikely victory in Malaysia and putting Kimi Raikkonen in the mix in Bahrain, however the decision not to match Mercedes’ pit-stop strategy this weekend is perplexing.

After fending off Hamilton in the first stint, then managing to come out ahead after the first round of stops, things were looking positive for Sebastian Vettel. By Hamilton’s own admission during the race overtaking in Catalunya was virtually impossible, even with the assistance of DRS.

“Fortunately towards the end it was enough to get it done on a three-stopper,” Hamilton told the press post-race. “I was able to get by, but if I had been behind him in traffic I wouldn’t have got past.”

Even if Hamilton could have passed Vettel on track, last race in Bahrain demonstrated that technical gremlins can occasionally ruin the party for Mercedes, so you’d have to think that if Hamilton went wide somewhere Vettel would be better served sitting right behind him ready to pounce rather than two positions back on sub-optimal tyres.

Raikkonen in the sister Ferrari illustrated that alternative strategies require the skill and speed to pull off overtakes to extract their full value, an easy task in the early stages against underpowered opponents, a very difficult one in the dying laps. Apart from providing the opportunity to sharpen up our Finnish puns, the battle for fourth between Valtteri Bottas and Raikkonen offered little about which to be enthused.

For whatever reason, and despite the eternal optimism of the Sky F1 commentary team, Rosberg appeared revitalised throughout the entire weekend. Unlike recent weeks where he conserved tyres for the race, he pushed his car to the limit in every qualifying session so those looking to dismiss the result as a fluke do so at their own peril.

Ultimately Hamilton’s poor start disguises the legitimacy of his achievement. With a generous lead in the championship it won’t give the reigning champion too many sleepless nights, but both he and Ferrari would be wise to examine their procedures ahead of Monaco, another notoriously processional track.

The Crowd Says:

2015-05-16T22:04:19+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


BOOORRIINNGGG FEST...that is F1

AUTHOR

2015-05-13T13:41:14+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


You are not wrong, I worry about what will happen to him if they fold, and it would be a real disservice to F1 to lose such a talented and popular driver!

2015-05-13T04:16:05+00:00

CW

Guest


The future is very murky indeed for Daniel Ricciardo with news Red Bull could pull out of Formula One. perhaps Seb Vettel knew something others did not and pulled the plug just in time.

AUTHOR

2015-05-12T12:34:45+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


Testing currently might get some teams back on track...

AUTHOR

2015-05-12T10:55:24+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


Oh boy hopefully!

2015-05-12T09:50:25+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Perhaps the early success this season has lifted the general expectation for Ferrari by the viewers. Perhaps with those PU upgrades coming in Montreal could give them back some speed.

AUTHOR

2015-05-12T09:13:40+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


He's a bit like Coulthard in that respect, very good at leading from pole. Hasn't shown us yet whether he is capable of grabbing race by the scruff of the neck and controlling it.

2015-05-12T08:54:14+00:00

Steph

Guest


My opinion of Nico is that he is another Mark Webber. A good driver who won't be capable of winning the world championship. He won't be able to compete with Hamilton in the current Mercedes. He won't be able to compete with Vettel in the next generation Ferrari. By the time Bottas, Ricciardo and Verstappen are in competitive cars he will have been past by. Doesn't mean he won't win a bunch of races. Just not when it truly counts.

AUTHOR

2015-05-12T04:05:14+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


You'd have to rule out a lot of world champions based on this criteria, perhaps even Michael Schumacher.

2015-05-12T01:14:44+00:00

Russell Crowe

Guest


Not a great driver (racer, he can lap fast in open air), just a great car... as seen by the distance between the merc and the rest.

Read more at The Roar