Mercedes' Monaco gaffe comes at the worst possible time for Formula One

By Rodney Gordon / Expert

Hearts are breaking in the Mercedes camp after a bizarre pit strategy denied Lewis Hamilton victory at the Monaco Grand Prix.

Hamilton was poised to dominate the weekend after taking pole position and leading comfortably, but in the end it was his lead that cost him victory when a late safety car deployment triggered the team to pit Hamilton for fresh tyres.

In the end the gap between the front runners wasn’t as sizeable as they thought, and rather than emerge in the lead he found himself in third behind teammate Nico Rosberg and Sebastian Vettel, stunning the audience at the track and notably on social media.

The mistake handed Rosberg his third successive victory in Monaco, a feat that no other driver without a championship has achieved.

“I’m sorry to him that we messed it up. It was the wrong decision (to pit him),” said Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff. “We can only apologise, apologise and apologise again. We calculated the gaps wrong. It was Lewis’ victory. And he has every reason to be angry.”

It was the second race this year where the decision to pit under the safety car has cost Mercedes and Hamilton. On lap 4 of the Malaysian Grand Prix both Hamilton and Rosberg took service behind the safety car, only for the pair to follow Sebastian Vettel’s Ferrari around for the rest of the afternoon.

It was hoped that winning both the drivers’ and constructors’ championships last year would be a monkey off their backs after a turbulent season with drivers tripping over each other at numerous races and being plagued by technical gremlins.

Instead the team has lacked focus and conviction, and it’s not only the fans that are questioning the credibility of Mercedes’ engineers with Sky F1 reporter Ted Kravitz asking, perhaps melodramatically, “How can Hamilton trust a call from the team ever again?”

Fans took to social media to vent their frustration with the result and the timing couldn’t have been worse on two fronts.

Not only is Monaco one of Lewis Hamilton’s favourite tracks, but it’s his home. He spent most of the 24 hours between qualifying and race saying how special it was to him and his affinity for it. It also doesn’t help that only days earlier the team had signed a new three-year partnership with Lewis worth €100 million.

To complicate matters further it was this race last year that temporarily derailed Hamilton’s championship charge. A victory here would have rectified the perceived wrong-doing of 2014, instead his frustration is only amplified.

Additionally, the Monaco race was supposed to launch a new era for Formula One. Two major fan surveys were launched last week to determine where the sport has gone wrong in recent years in an attempt to seduce fans back to the track. Both ask the respondents where they think the sport has gone wrong and gauges their interest in proposed regulation changes, including the reintroduction of refueling, changes to the qualifying format and even the ludicrous prospect of reverse grids.

Formula One is far from dead, but it sure has a smell about it with the speed and noise of the cars being identified as one of the possible reasons for fans are turning away.

During the pre-race drivers’ press conference Fernando Alonso reiterated this sentiment saying, “We cannot run one second quicker than GP2 cars because the grandstands are empty.”

Columnist and analysts sometimes spend too much time dreaming up hypotheticals, but I can’t help but wonder what would have happened if Hamilton had managed to get a run on Vettel through the tunnel and screamed up the inside coming in to the Nouvelle chicane. Would the team have asked Rosberg to move aside and let Hamilton through, and if they did… what would his response have been?

The Crowd Says:

2015-05-28T05:37:39+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Monaco was the most boring of the three races in the 18+ span from Sunday night to early Monday afternoon. That's not a good sign.

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T12:13:06+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


Nico's performance last year, especially in the european races, would suggest that he does better there than the fly-aways... but yes, Hamilton is in the box seat and Nico has it all to do.

2015-05-25T04:56:54+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


I don't think the casual observer understands F1 enough to comprehend the issues with the pit crew and so on. They will see that someone other than the favourite won the race and the championship race is now closer and therefore worthwhile following. I'm with you in that I too miss the sound of the cars. When that piercing scream of the engines rang through my house, I knew someone had the F1 on. Now it could be anything. That's why the F1 needs these dramas and controversies to keep it going.

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T03:40:35+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


Cool.

2015-05-25T03:39:38+00:00

Distant Knight

Guest


Yes Hamilton dominated early last season, but he also had a DNF in Australia with kept the title fight artificially close late into the season. It made Rosberg think he actually had a chance last year. Can't see him keeping up with Lewis for many more races this season though, once he gets about a 30 point gap it'll be all over.

2015-05-25T03:35:31+00:00

Scuba

Guest


I think the premise of the article is wrong. What couldn't have come at a worse possible time for F1 that is (rightly or wrongly) considered to be "boring" is the standard procession around Monaco where position at the first corner of Lap 1 dictates the entire race (subject to a massive stuff up in the pits (Hamilton, Verstappen) or a frustrated driver trying something not on (Verstappen)). At least the end of the race has people talking!

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T03:06:06+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


And having just agreed to give him $100 million and the best car on the grid Hamilton can't stay mad at them for too long ;)

2015-05-25T02:47:08+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Perhaps it's time for Mercedes AMG to review having a sole strategist for both drivers. That's twice this year that they've made a major mess-up (Malaysia being the first), but the positive for the team here was that at least it was one of their drivers who won in the end and not someone else.

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T02:07:55+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


I'm sure most of Hamilton's "angels" would agree that when he doesn't win it's usually Rosberg's fault. By and large the pitstops are, and should be, the team's call. Hamilton said after the race he assumed ROS and VET had also come in for tyres.

2015-05-25T01:52:05+00:00

Liam

Guest


Why is it that when ever Hamilton losses it's the teams fault? Surely he could have questioned the call or told the team no. Even with new tires it's very hard to pass at Monaco.

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T01:46:34+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


It genuinely gives me chills.

2015-05-25T01:38:46+00:00

Michael Lamonato

Expert


That last point is an excellent question. What would have happened? Would they have been able to reason with Rosberg at that point? It is, after all, more his home race than Hamilton's if we want to think about it like that. What a fantastically ugly scenario that would have been!

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T01:24:16+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


Hamilton dominated in the early stages of 2014 and it was the Monaco disruption that knocked him on his ass, and it took months for him to get back up. I don't think it'll take him that long this time, but it certainly spices things up a bit.

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T01:20:59+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


It's great that you're talking about F1, I love digging in to controversies as much as the next man. I'm still not convincing that it's good for the sport to deny a worth victor his spoils. I worry that casual fans will simply add "they pit crews are clueless" to a growing list of complains that the cars are "too slow, too quiet, too boring" etc.

2015-05-25T01:06:33+00:00

Damo

Guest


True, but my concern is with Rosberg's ticker. If Hamilton disappears too far down the road, Championship speaking, too early in the season I'm not sure how much fight Rosberg would give in the second half of the year. And let's be honest, the internal games at Mercedes are the most interesting part of this season.

2015-05-25T01:02:32+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


This is a really confusing article. It doesn't seem clear how this is bad for F1. I see how this is a negative for Hamilton, his fans and possibly his team. But even then the negatives are very minor. Hamilton still holds a lead in the championship and will continue to fight for the rest of the season. His fans have little to complain about as their man still looks to be heading towards another championship and his team will win the constructors championship at a canter. When I saw this race I did feel that Hamilton was robbed of a near certain win. But in the same way as his team has given him a car that has allowed him to dominate the season so far, they have now let him down. That's just fundamental team dynamics. If F1 wants to move beyond an image of rich guys racing around in helmets, it needs to market these dramas and this type of narrative and show that it is much more than an individual sport. Last night was brilliant for F1. It really got discussion going around my office this morning and with the lead down to 10 points, the next round is looking much more exciting.

AUTHOR

2015-05-25T01:00:31+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


Rosberg won convincingly last race, we still have a long way to go! :)

2015-05-25T00:43:48+00:00

Damo

Guest


The flip side is that for the sake of the championship, it couldn't have come at a better time.

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