What now for F1 in 2019?

By Jawad Yaqub / Roar Guru

It has been widely conceded that after a fifth consecutive one-two finish for Mercedes AMG, the 2019 Formula One world championship is already decided only five events into a 21-race season.

Despite the hype from fans and pundits alike during the pre-season that Ferrari may finally usurp the mighty Silver Arrows atop the Formula One mantle, the narrative thus far has been the stark opposite.

The Spanish Grand Prix – hosted at the venue where winter testing was conducted and where Ferrari threw down the gauntlet to the rest of the competition – saw the Scuderia not only blown away by the reigning world champions, but even relegated to the third fastest car.

So far in 2019, the only race at which the Prancing Horse lived up to their pre-season form was in Bahrain and even there they capitulated with a car fault, all while 21-year-old Charles Leclerc looked guaranteed to win his first Grand Prix.

The potential shown across the eight days of testing remain frustratingly difficult to unlock for Ferrari even after aerodynamical and engine upgrades at the Spanish Grand Prix. They may have to admit that they’ve taken the wrong development path for this season.

World-beaters Mercedes evidently have the balance of power and downforce on their W10 – the latter quality is what Ferrari seem to be lacking, as seen through their deficits through high-speed corners. Tyre performance, too, is something that the team in silver seem to be understanding better than those in red.

So what now? Attempting to dissect and debate where Ferrari got it wrong this year could easily take hours and fill endless columns, as it has for the past five campaigns.

There is the hope that a repeat of the 2016 championship could be on the cards, if Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas can take the title race down to the wire in Abu Dhabi. After a dire campaign in 2018, Bottas has emerged as a reborn force. He’s won two races and has a hat trick of pole positions under his belt.

(Mercedes AMG Petronas/Wolfgang Wilhelm)

Hamilton hasn’t been perfect, despite his three wins including the one inherited in Bahrain. And if he does expose any vulnerabilities, as he did in 2016 to the eventual champion Nico Rosberg, new team-mate Bottas must capitalise.

Qualifying in Barcelona was an example of Bottas’ brilliance, blowing Hamilton out of the park by six tenths of a second. Though on the day that matters, the five-time world champion responded with the emphatic victory and recorded the fastest lap of the race to secure an extra point.

The standings now only see a seven-point difference between the team-mates, in the Briton’s favour. If Bottas can continue to go toe-to-toe with his team-mate, then at least an enthralling intra-team championship race can whet the soured appetites of the many hoping for a change at the top of the championship.

Beyond the top three teams, the midfield competition warrants close viewing at each race weekend, given how compacted those six teams are. Even the pre-season predictions there haven’t quite eventuated, as Renault and Haas have been disappointing and instead McLaren have been the team on the rise.

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Though in the end, they’re only racing to claim fourth place in the constructors’ championship, which hardly has the appeal of winning the big trophy outright. They’re leagues behind where Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull are sitting.

It is ironic that despite their dominance, Mercedes hold the key to saving the 2019 championship race.

And it can be guaranteed that at season’s end, the images of the perfectly executed double pit-stop from China will be the definition of this year.

For Ferrari though, with all their vast resources and two world-class drivers including four-time world champion Sebastian Vettel, they may have to take a leaf out of their rival’s book moving forwards.

As whatever philosophy they’ve been following, it isn’t paying dividends.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2019-05-19T04:03:19+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Even the differing front-wing philosophies that both teams have adopted has been quite telling of each of their fortunes. As far the Ferrari drivers are concerned, I was all for Leclerc after Bahrain believing that he had the composure to perhaps challenge. Even after his mistake in Baku, he could still do but it ultimately depends on how the team are going to prioritise their drivers. At the end of the day, Ferrari just don't seem to have the confidence in making strategy calls as Mercedes does and that has been evident even with Kimi was still with the team. Rather than being proactive and taking the races by the scruff of the neck, they are very jittery in their reactions. Until they can sort that, they can have the fastest car and still not win a championship.

2019-05-18T03:59:39+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Qualifying is the best indicator of pace and while I haven't been counting I think Vettel is ahead. But according to the aero guys Mercedes have more development available than Ferrari (they use polar opposite set ups) meaning they are more likely to keep getting faster than Ferrari. Vettel had a good dig at the start last race; just needed to pull it off and the whole race changes.

2019-05-17T03:18:55+00:00

JT

Guest


What a load of nonsense. Are u gonna plainly ignore Leclerc’s mistake in Baku just to bash Vettel. Not even the current champion can drag that dog of a car to the championship. Vettel leads by merit in the team. They should have waited to promote Leclerc. He’s fast but not ready yet. No way he can take on Mercedes at their peak driving a slow Ferrari.

2019-05-17T00:10:32+00:00

AJ

Roar Rookie


Don't remove Leclerc from the discussion yet. That's dependent on 2 things though - Ferrari getting their act together and getting at least close to the Mercedes, and also to cease giving Vettel preferential treatment. I honestly don't think Vettel can win a championship anymore. He's just making too many mistakes, and will continually lose points because of it. The pace just isn't there anymore, either, as Leclerc has had a better season to date (even if the points total says otherwise)

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