Blue flags and DRS: The controversial saviours of modern Formula One

By Rodney Gordon / Expert

Last weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix was punctuated by several drivers despondently calling for their peers to respect the blue flags that are shown when the trailing driver is one lap ahead, and it’s becoming an increasingly common occurrence.

During the race, Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel was singing a familiar tune, frustrated at the lack of respect his fellow drivers were showing to cars on the lead lap.

It wasn’t long before Max Verstappen and Kimi Raikkonen leant their voices to the chorus, suggesting it perhaps wasn’t just Vettel’s usual posturing.

During the race, for the first time since the early phase of the season, Vettel found himself chasing down the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton.

For a couple of laps he held station within one second of the reigning champion, but promptly told the team he couldn’t hold on to the back of him, and certainly his race strategy would have suffered if he’d lit up his tyres by prolonging the chase.

“If you look at the gap at the end they were quite far ahead of us,” Vettel said. “We just had more tyre degradation to fight with than what we expected.”

Still, it demonstrates just how important being held up, by even a few tenths, can be to chasing someone as opposed to defending.

“There’s a lot of consecutive corners here and if you’re in that part of the track, you can’t expect the car in front to move over,” the German added.

It’s likely that Vettel’s habit of complaining about blue flags developed during his years with Red Bull, where his advantage through the corners made the lacklustre pace of the backmarkers all the more pronounced.

Purists will say all driver aids such as blue flags and DRS should be discarded. It’s clear that when there’s political will behind it, regulations can be altered or dissolved altogether.

Earlier this year, a radio clampdown on ‘driver coaching’ was introduced before being scrapped following a fan backlash. Conversations about how to rescind the ill-conceived elimination qualifying format were taking place before the inaugural session had even finished.

So, why do we keep blue flags around?

As far as the guardians of Formula One are concerned, there’s no problem that increased regulation. Once introduced these rules tend to stick around, like to 107 per cent rule that wrecked havoc in Hungary this year.

Some recent changes to the sport have had a more positive impact. It’s widely accepted that introducing additional tyre compounds has improved the spectacle of the sport this season with a broader range of strategies on offer. While this has spiced up the odd race, it doesn’t eradicate the need for assists like DRS or blue flags.

When teams are feeling especially adventurous they’d try their hand at a contra strategy, but inevitably making additional pitstops relies on the drivers’ ability to overtake to put the strategy to good use.

Sadly, assists like blue flags and DRS remaining a part of F1 is as certain as Verstappen moving in the braking zone. At least, so long as the aerodynamic dependences of the cars remain as they are currently.

Today’s ground effect designed cars simply aren’t built for wholesale overtaking. It is what it is. They are quick and fierce, and they are only going to get quicker and fiercer, but doing away with driver aids will only make the racing more processional, less dynamic and downright boring.

A radical overhaul will be no simple task, but it’s what’s required if we are ever to rid ourselves of these driver aids. They keep traffic flowing while also representing everything wrong with the sport, they’re like

So I’m sorry, Sebastian, you’ll probably still be cursing blue flags and the lackadaisical reactions of the backmarkers until the day you retire. Assuming you aren’t a backmarker yourself that is.

The Crowd Says:

2016-10-22T19:46:18+00:00

Mark Young

Roar Guru


I like DRS and I sorta like Blue Flags. Make no mistake, F1 cars with their huge rear wings and fancy front wings are bad for overtaking. They need clear air to go fast but blow twisted turbulent air out behind them. I am totally in favour of either ditching the front or rear wing OR keeping DRS so that the driver can overtake and the car can look the same. I'm in favour though of more driver input. If you are in DRS zone at the change of sector, you get 5 seconds of DRS to use in the next lap, like the boost button, use it when you feel like it. Blue flags are kind of stupid because if you are faster you should just drive past them. But we are in an era of F1 where the slowest cars are actually not that slow, which coupled with the overtaking issue makes some sort of regulation essential. Maybe Seb needs to Senna up and go down to the other garages to sort them out?? I can't imagine him doing that though!

2016-10-19T20:41:02+00:00

NaBUru38

Guest


Moreover, in the old days of Fangio and Moss, if you were slower you would let faster cars go by easily, eben on the lead lap. It changed of course well before Giles Villeneuve did his Jarama 81 stunt. Lapped cars shouldnt block faster cars, but faster cars shouldnt expect them to leave the track either.

2016-10-19T06:51:19+00:00

Ian

Guest


What a dreadful article. You do realise that blue flags go as far down as club racing and aren't limited just to F1. They certainly aren't a "driver assist" as you put it. And you think blue flags are an assist now, wait until Toro Rosso let's the Red Bull cas sail by and then suddenly blocks Ferrari, Mercedes and Williams .

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