Ferrari must retain the faith

By Bayden Westerweller / Roar Guru

It’d be easy to affirm that Mercedes has wrested back the ascendancy following their second consecutive victory, though Ferrari must not enter its time honoured panic state, with circumstance dictating the outcome once more at the Spanish Grand Prix.

The Silver Arrows’ three victories to the Prancing Horse’s two at ‘quarter time’ is an arbitrary figure, with results belying the true order, and to that end, leaving rivals in their collective wake, as attested to the entire field sans distant third place getter, Daniel Ricciardo, being lapped on Sunday.

As at China, Mercedes weren’t explicitly handed a free pass upon the virtual safety car’s deployment at mid-distance, rather they optimised the situation to full effect while Ferrari took a small though decisive misstep. This was all the invitation necessary for pole sitter Lewis Hamilton to strike, claiming game and set, yet unlike years past, the match remains very much in play.

The bevy of upgrades which accompanied the Mercedes freight to Barcelona had a large hand in the outcome, most prominently restoring its qualifying advantage while honing its straight line edge. “I was a bit lucky because there was always a car in front giving me a tow, but as soon as I was alone, he just flew past”, confided Sebastian Vettel, who led the majority of the opening two-thirds of the race having lined up second, until being deposed for the lead on lap 44.

Considering Vettel’s early charge into the distance, not for the first time this season, it’s difficult to distinguish how different the result might have been in lieu of the VSC, while the notion that Vettel remained within earshot of the Briton following his demotion to second, being beaten to the punch shouldn’t deter Ferrari from its current trajectory.

Continuing to shun last season’s reactive approach by calling Vettel in early didn’t appear to be the right call in hindsight, losing crucial time behind Valtteri Bottas who would later retire, with a third stop on the table until the closing laps, and the decision not to stop while the VSC remained in effect was even costlier, though outright race pace remains marginally superior to the Brackley outfit.

(Photo: GEPA pictures/ Daniel Goetzhaber)

Victorious Hamilton, who appeared physically drained post-race, described it as “the rawest fight I can remember having for some time, which I loved”, which speaks to the volume of Ferrari’s resurgence in causing Mercedes pitwall genuine headaches on a constant basis, wholly earning the victories which fell like lemons in the previous three campaigns.

It mustn’t be forgotten that the German retains his lead in the standings on account of his consistency, finishing no lower than second at the opening five events, and if nothing else, issues which forced him to switch power unit components prior to qualifying rendered his third runner-up haul damage limitation.

Demonstrating that victory at Australia, and contention at the least, was not isolated at subsequent weekends, the indifference of 2016 has been replaced by a surer Ferrari which is in control of its destiny and willing to invest in decisions, which with a little luck could have fallen in its favour, rather than the ambivalence which denied several victory opportunities in the previous twelve months.

It’s tough to fathom Vettel – who has repeatedly stated that more was learned than on-track performances suggested last season, abruptly walking away from the lure of a successful future and into Mercedes’ arms, as some reports suggest, while Kimi Räikkönen’s unfortunate opening lap demise has consolidated the 29-year-old’s standing as the title focus.

While the gulf from Mercedes to the third fastest outfit and beyond remains largely intact from previous seasons, they now count on Ferrari for company and it’s impossible to determine in which order, though most pertinently who will emerge so long as the latter remains true to the cause.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2017-05-17T05:18:55+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Who knows what's possible if Ferrari delivers an even larger upgrade at coming events, to have been this close to victory considering Mercedes' fundamental overhaul bodes extremely well for the balance of the season. It simply hasn't been Raikkonen's season, as has been the case since he rejoined Maranello, though he has displayed when the limited opportunities have presented itself that he still has it, all he requires is an entirely clean weekend and a victory can be anticipated.

AUTHOR

2017-05-17T05:16:12+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Mercedes certainly enjoys a straight line advantage, though it's nearly impossible to separate in other areas. It does help that Vettel's hunger has been restored to maximum capacity, and Ferrari largely functioning to precision.

2017-05-16T12:02:46+00:00

deleteaccountplease

Roar Rookie


I think many fans had their doubts as to whether the Scuderia could keep fighting with Mercedes after last seasons good performance in Australia and then huge dip in results, but its a great sign that even after the upgrades in Spain they were still very close. Now its time for them to grab some more wins, and Raikonnen to hopefully deliver some better results!

2017-05-16T05:03:50+00:00

Elliott Wrigglesworth-Smith

Guest


Vettel has done an incredible job considering Mercedes has had the car advantage at every track.

AUTHOR

2017-05-16T04:45:45+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Very little has separated Ferrari from claiming each event to date, and so long as the consistency remains, they're in extremely fine shape for the title. Anything that drives Vettel from Ferrari as early as next season would have to be personnel related, or potentially dictated by Alonso's return - though the German doesn't strike me as somebody who would issue a myself or him ultimatum, as you'd be insane to leave them now they're looking like an organisation with its house in order.

2017-05-15T21:17:36+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


For me, they've so far ticked off box on the 'things the old Ferrari would do' list, being that the upgrades they brought to Barcelona didn't backfire upon them. It's about continuing on this path for the remainder of the season now. As for Vettel's future, he's stated multiple times that he wants to be world champion for Ferrari and I doubt he will leave Maranello before that occurs. Especially now if Ferrari have a car to rival Mercedes AMG, as the allure to the Silver Arrows would only be if they strictly had the best car or you're Fernando Alonso and are not wanted back at Ferrari.

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