Brawn: Team orders ‘against my sporting nature’

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In the round-up: Mercedes team principal Ross Brawn admits he didn’t enjoy enforcing team orders during the Malaysian Grand Prix.

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Brawn says team orders went against his nature (Reuters)

“I didn’t like having to give the orders I gave in Malaysia, it’s not in my sporting nature and I think the team have demonstrated many times in the past that we are very happy to let our drivers race each other.”

Jules Bianchi Q&A (Sky)

“Do you have any personal goals in 2013?
JB: ‘First of all I will try to finish every race – I know it will be something really difficult, so I will focus on that and try to gain more experience by finishing every race I can.'”

What it means to run Ferrari (Autosport, subscription required)

Stefano Domenicali: “Remember we started last year 1.6s behind and by July we had the best car. But it’s normal that you cannot keep that gradient of development. So the objective of this year is, for sure, to try to be more competitive.”

No doubting there will be a right time for wrong-time Webber (The Age)

“Red Bull has confirmed Vettel had more horsepower than his teammate in Malaysia after the technicians asked for the engines to be turned down on both cars. ‘[Sebastian Vettel’s] engine was turned down, but not as much as Mark’s due to differing strategies and tyre wear,’ said a spokesperson.”

How did McLaren lose a Grand Prix by finishing first? (McLaren)

“At the same time Barrichello overtook Coulthard to retake the lead, and I well remember the thunderous cheer that immediately went up from the grandstands all around Interlagos, audible even above two competing noise sources: the fever-pitched wail of the high-revving 3.0-litre V10 engines in the 11 cars that still remained running by that point, and the rat-tat-tatting of the rain on the press room roof (or what remained of it, because the leak had now developed into a bloody great hole). Indeed, I remember blinking at the surreal sight of hapless hacks stoically hammering away at their laptops even as rainwater lapped at their ankles.”

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135 comments on “Brawn: Team orders ‘against my sporting nature’”

  1. I have no sympathy for Brawn: team orders weren’t at all necessary I didn’t believe for either Red Bull or Mercedes, and so shouldn’t have been enforced – as long as they fight fairly, may the best man win.

    1. Agreed 100%, he is contradicting himself by claiming that the team has no problems letting their drivers race each other after what happened in Malaysia – clearly the team were willing to give up the chance to score more points to keep their drivers from racing each other

      1. Mercedes in general and Rosberg in particular did not have the pace to catch Red Bull.

        1. But what if Vettel and Webber had forced each other off the track? One of them could easily have lost 10 seconds in a spin or taken damage to their wing… the smart thing to do is have your drivers ready to take advantage.

        2. I am sure he had much better pa ce than Hamilton.

      2. @frost_byte_94 Well they were racing eachother initially. Nico overtook Lewis into the final hairpin twice, only to get re-passed in the second DRS zone down the start-finish straight. The radio conversation seemed to start after this. In which case, it seems that if Nico had made the move stick there would have been no problem. But constant passing and re-passing just heightens risk, and thus increases the chances of lost revenue.

        I say we all get over it already. Unless it’s going to stop you from watching the next race, or send in a formal complaint, give it a rest.

        1. +1 @timi, it’s all part of the cost saving ” reliability” regulations plus tyre management, we can’t have team members racing each other all race long under this regime, so get used to it.

        2. Antonio (@antoniocorleone)
          7th April 2013, 16:28

          The overtaking done by Mercedes drivers at the two DRS zones was to make their lap times around 2 tenths faster, so that was a team order also.

      3. I’m so sick to death of the teams rolling out the old line about not wanting their drivers to race so that they don’t crash!

        Are they kidding?

        First of all, how often during a race to ANY drivers collide or crash when going wheel to wheel? Not very often.
        Second of all, they are team mates so naturally an extra air of caution will be used by both drivers instinctively.
        Thirdly, these are the highest paid drivers in the bloody world! Between Hamilton and Rosberg, Mercedes are paying out over 30M Euros PER SEASON for them to do exactly that – drive and RACE. If two team mates who are paid that amount of money can’t be trusted to do their job without cocking it up they deserve to be sacked!

        The same can be said about RedBull. Although, in their case, I can understand. After all, if they were allowed to race Vettel would be one of those drivers, hence the problem. We all know he’s arrogant, ignorant, spoiled, hot headed and not very spatially aware.

        I can recall no time at all that Mark Webber has EVER had an incident with any team mate barring two occasions – Fuji 2007 and Turkey 2010. Both times with Vettel and both times Vettel’s fault. OK, so in 2007 they weren’t team mates, but they all but were (same company).

        Webber is one of the best wheel to wheel racers on the grid. Just look at his MANY wheel to wheel battles with Alonso – superb! The only loose cannon and only reason they are not allowed to race is Vettel. The team know he is a liability in this situation.

        Webber screwed by Vettel yet again!

        1. Webber has crashed multiple times in battle, with Kovalainen as most famous example but there were collisions with Raikkonen in 2009 Brazil, with Barrichello in 2009 Nurburgring (spatial awareness?) and a lot more in his Jaguar-period, but nobody remembers them as he was at the front. Not to mention that because he is not at the front, he got away with things where Schumacer, Maldonado or Grosjean would have been well and truly punished for.

          As for the Fuji 2007 incident, Hamilton got reprimanded or warned for that and the rules were clarified. Why would that have been?

        2. @nick101 – Ridiculous. Even in the 2010 season, Webber had more wheel-to-wheel crashes than Vettel. Like with Kovalainen, and at least twice with Hamilton.

        3. @nick101 – the very fact you have referred to incidents that were over two years ago rather screws your point: Vettel is perfectly capable of driving wheel-to-wheel now, as was the case in Malaysia. In fact, if you watch the Red Bull Racing story there is a specific mention of the Turkey incident and how they now exercise more caution when racing with each other.

          Good point on the Mercedes’ incident though.

        4. Strictly Vettel and Webber weren’t team mates in 2007.

          But I can think of 3 accidents between Webber and a team mate, all at Brazil:
          2004: where in Jaguar’s last ever race he collided with Klien, putting himself out and relegating Klien to a low spot. More Webber’s fault than Klien’s, turned into him while trying to overtake.
          2005: With Pizzonia, but can’t remember more than that
          2006: The origin of the Rosberg’s Britney nickname – Rosberg’s fault from memory, ran up his backside.

        5. Webber is one of the best wheel to wheel racers on the grid. Just look at his MANY wheel to wheel battles with Alonso – superb!

          Webber has been involved in far more accidents and has crashed out of more races over the last few years than Vettel has. Just last season Webber crashed out at Monza and Abu Dhabi. He’s a rather crash-prone driver.

      4. The counter-argument to that is Hamilton obviously wasn’t going to just let him past, as was evidenced, so think of it in these terms: Rosberg *eventually* passes Hamilton, gains no places because nothing happened with the RBR drivers, and Hamilton ended up using so much fuel that he couldn’t finish the race. A Mercedes 3/4 has now become a 3/DNF, losing them points. So the only option there is to give Hamilton the order to let Rosberg through, which is still a team order. At this point in the season, for a constructor, an almost guaranteed 3/4 finish is a good result.

        1. I disagree that, had they been allowed to race, Hamilton would’ve run out of fuel and not finished. The man is one of the best racing drivers in the world and even though he wears his emotions on his sleeve he had the discipline to realize that he could not realistically match his teammates pace as soon as he got out of the car.
          I would be very surprised to see any driver run his car empty to hold one position at the risk of a DNF.

          Rosberg’s chance of catching the Red Bulls is completely subjective – nobody knows what kind of pace he was harbouring while following Hamilton, and nobody knows how much the Red Bulls held off after the multi-21 call went out. The argument is more about Mercedes denying their driver a better opportunity to capitalize on any problems up the road.

    2. JP (@jonathanproc)
      7th April 2013, 1:39

      @vettel1 You say “may the best man win” however this may not have been the case if team orders were not present two weeks ago.

      Hamilton was going visually slower towards the end of the race as the fuel situation became so critical. You could see him lifting off ages before the braking zones and coasting before putting the brakes on. If Brawn allowed them to race (which I’m not saying wouldn’t have been the right thing) then Rosberg would have easily passed due to the fact the he didn’t have to conserve fuel. So in that case we don’t really know if the best man would have won. I personally believe (not just because I’m a fan of Lewis) that the best man would have lost out.

      The same scenario may have occurred at Red Bull. How do we know the best man would have won when one was at a disadvantage?

      Other than that I agree that orders were not necessary from a motorsport fan’s perspective, but from a team principles perspective I can see the logic behind them.

      1. @jonathanproc – this is true, but I class “best man” as “fastest man”, so from that standpoint Rosberg should not have been handicapped because there was a mistake on Hamilton’s side of the garage.

        The same scenario may have occurred at Red Bull. How do we know the best man would have won when one was at a disadvantage?

        Well in that situation I think the best man did win: Webber had used more fuel in the opening part of the race whilst Vettel was able to keep some in reserve for a late attack, as well as tyres which he had saved from qualifying. So in that case I think team orders were completely unnecessary, even more so than in the case of Mercedes.

        from a team principles perspective I can see the logic behind them

        As can I, but if we were to always look at it from a team perspective the racing would be incredibly boring and we’d likely see far more Ferrari-like team orders! Besides, I think around half a billion fan’s opinions hold more value than one team principal’s honestly.

        1. JP (@jonathanproc)
          7th April 2013, 14:07

          @vettel1

          I class “best man” as “fastest man”, so from that standpoint Rosberg should not have been handicapped because there was a mistake on Hamilton’s side of the garage.

          But the situation was that the fastest man was potentially in the slower car. Rosberg was in the fastest car but that doesn’t mean he was the fastest man.

          Webber had used more fuel in the opening part of the race whilst Vettel was able to keep some in reserve for a late attack, as well as tyres which he had saved from qualifying.

          What evidence do you have which shows Webber “used more fuel” during the first half of the race? I’m not saying it’s not true – I’d just like this to be confirmed by a source! One fact you seem to have glossed over is that Vettel made a mistake in switching to the dry tyres too early. This mistake gave the lead to Webber because he read the conditions better. His engine was then turned down more than Vettel’s – and you say in your first comment “as long as they fight fairly” – which clearly resulted in an unfair battle.

          I think around half a billion fan’s opinions hold more value than one team principal’s honestly.

          Well it just so happens to be the case that we have that single team principle being the one in charge of making the calls, not “half a billion fan’s!” as you say! So we’ll just have to live with what we’ve got.

          1. @jonathanproc

            Rosberg was in the fastest car but that doesn’t mean he was the fastest man.

            The way I see it, the two are intrinsically linked: Vettel in his Red Bull is faster than Van der Garde in his Caterham. I see where you’re coming from, but the reality is that Rosberg in his W04 was faster than Hamilton in his W04, so from my standpoint as a fan I think the faster pairing shouldn’t have been reigned in.

            I’d just like this to be confirmed by a source!

            here you go, and I believe that article is based on one from Auto Motor und Sport, who are fairly reliable!

            One fact you seem to have glossed over is that Vettel made a mistake in switching to the dry tyres too early.

            That is true, it was a mistake on Vettel’s side of the garage (not necessarily just Vettel), which was then rectified in the final stint when Vettel pitted first and slashed the gap to Webber. You could interpret that as a mistake on Webber’s side of the garage!

            His engine was then turned down more than Vettel’s – and you say in your first comment “as long as they fight fairly” – which clearly resulted in an unfair battle.

            Was it though? If indeed Webber used more fuel than Vettel initially – hence allowing Vettel to keep his engine turned up later on the race – it was very much fair, and just good strategic play by Vettel. Webber could always have just turned his engine back up anyway had he the fuel.

    3. ” team orders weren’t at all necessary …..may the best man win.”
      It’s been said so many times and if you had read the article, you’ld see that inadequate fuel was the issue. Both drivers dueling could have ended in both using up their fuels before the finish line. Now, who does that favour?
      On the 2 occasions that Rosberg passed Hamilton, Hamilton regained both positions easily meaning that he could go faster than Rosberg if he so wished. And up till then Brawn had not mentioned to Nico to stay behind Lewis.
      While I don’t support team orders at all, I think the call made by Brawn was the right call considering the circumstances.

      1. ..using up their *fuel.

      2. As mentioned, Ross Brawn said it was a fuel issue with both cars being the reason. He has taken complete responsibility for the call and said he wished not to have to do it. I would give him the benefit of the doubt this time. Actions will speak loudly whether these words ring true before the season is over. It’s really great to see the performance of the car the Mercedes team has brought to the track so far this season. It will be better still to see how both drivers are able to compete the rest of the season.

      3. Both drivers dueling could have ended in both using up their fuels

        Spot the more likely summary:

        A.

        Both drivers had been under-fuelled, both had been told the situation about it, and were asked to slow down. However, Rosberg is dumb as hell or he doesn’t understand plain English, so he kept going on his radio to convince Brawn he’s faster.

        B.

        Only Hamilton was critically low on fuel, so no frightening prospect of them duelling till the end. However, for some reason (of non-sporting nature) Brawn wanted him to finish in front. So he kept embellishing and re-configuring his story, from a curt “Negative” to the inadequate explanation “Lewis could go just as fast” to the more defensible tale “Both were under-fuelled”.

        Well?

        People in general like to put a self-justifying spin on their actions, but people in position of authority are best placed to actually manufacture the story that backs it up.

        I might also mention Toto Wolff’s similarly insincere attempt at explaining the controversy away (“they could have crashed” … oh yeah, obvious speed difference + easy track to overtake + team mates on friendly terms = it could only end in a crash); or all the extra info generated by Red Bull since the GP weekend with the thinly disguised intent of mitigating the controversial aspects of their own team order issue.

        1. From what was played on the pit radio channel, Hamilton received far more ‘low fuel’ warnings than Rosberg. He was being told to ‘lift and coast’ from the early stages of the race.

        2. I think option B is far more likely, so why then should Rosberg have been punished for somebody on Hamilton’s side of the garage **** up? That is what I don’t quite understand.

    4. I fully agree with that, they were neither suitable at Mercedes, nor at Red Bull and certainly not for Williams etc. More comfortable for the teams, possibly, but that is not much of an excuse.

      Its well possible that Rosberg could have challenged Webber (who apparently did have to save fuel, unlike Vettel – german source) and had made the race even better.

      On the other hand I do think that Brawn is right here

      “Somebody has to make those decisions. What you can’t do is have those decisions made by a group or a committee. There’s no time.”

      – Both Toto and Niki speaking about it were only good for supporting the rumours of Brawn being replaced. And at Red Bull, I still think it will have the whole management spurning PR as much because of the drivers as in trying to take away the very strong impression Horner is not much in that position at all.

    5. kowalsky is back
      7th April 2013, 10:01

      he has sort memory, as the f1 fanatic followers. He was a senior member of the evil empire. Schumacher, todt, brawn etc. I would say if i look at his background that he loves team orders, and even worse, at the start of the season when the only thing they achieve is peace of mind on top of the fans that payed big bucks to watch a fake show.
      So thanks Vettel, you made all the wrongs right disobeying team orders. The only mistake was to act oposite to what schumacher used to do when he was caught doing something wrong. Not accepting his mistake, i imagine for all the pain he had to suffer from the media and fans. Wrong call this time. Even if i think there was not right call after the action was done.

    6. Do we know the reason why Mercedes used team orders? I don’t think so, therefore I can’t understand where your opinion comes from. They are still somewhat secretive of the true nature they didn’t let Rosberg past.

  2. Remember we started last year 1.6s behind and by July we had the best car.

    If I remember rightly, both him and Alonso kept going on about how slow their car is in comparison to Red Bull and McLaren at pretty much every single race last year.

    1. cool story bro

    2. And it seems saying that they’ve said that all over 2012 is going to be repeated even more in 2013, which is deliciously ironic.

        1. What amazes me the most is the comparison with Mclaren , i mean seriously i can’t remember the Mclaren drivers contention for the WDC last year

          1. they should have been in contention as mclaren had the fastest car last year. they started fastest and finished fastest

          2. The Car could have won the WDC and WCC, the rest of the team, not so much

          3. The car and Hamilton could have won.

  3. Well, Bianchi knows his car is sub-par and finishing races is a good goal. He needs mileage and solid drives to impress Ferrari and eventually someone running a mid-field team.

    1. His aim should be to score points, obviously not entirely in his control but it’ll probably mean beating 3 other guys at least…

      1. if he wants to score points his first aim would be to finish every race, both caterham and marussia can’t (at the moment) score points on their speed, therefore if all four drivers including bianchi aim to finish every race there is always the chance of them stealing a point due to a big crash or a teams facing many mechanical problems

      2. I think that his only chance to ever get a point with Marussia is to finish even in races that have a lot of cars crashing out, regardless of how many cars finish behind him @george. So then wanting to finish every race is exactly the right way to go at it.

        1. @bascb
          Well, when was the last time less than 10 cars finished a race? I just think having your aim as ‘finishing every race’ is a very low bar to set, especially considering how the first two races have gone. Also, shouldn’t his aims echo those of the team? Although I admit I haven’t heard as much from them as Caterham on this topic, I’m sure their aim is to get into the points too.

          What’s the point in racing just to finish?

          1. The point is, that you have to finish in the first case, to be able to be one of those 10.
            If the car is not fast enough by far to get in front of so many others on pace, what better thing to do than to limit mistakes and hope to capitalize when others do make mistakes and do not finish @george?

    2. As Mario Andretti said, to finish first, first you must finish. I think Bianchi definitely has the right idea. If you finish any race, you may have a chance for points. I like his spirit.

      1. Bianchi will fade away if he don’t change that goal-setting. To finish as many races as possible will make him content with just finishing, and he will avoid risk-taking and confrontations with competitors. Look at polite Heidfeld, who has a record of finishing most races vs top aggressive drivers. As if You only learn from finishing races, just the opposite, You learn even more from Your failures. Look at how much Grosjean learned last year. Not that I suggest Bianchi should make a “Grosjean” just to learn, but to develop he must also seek out the battle and the action that sooner or later leads to DNF’s due to crashes or run-offs. He just has to choose the battles carefully.

  4. Yes, we all remember Brawn’s “sporting nature” and his deep abhorrence for team orders from his time with Schumacher and Barrichello at Ferrari!

    Un. Believable.

    1. Yes, I like Ross Brawn a lot, but these comments from him are…um, surprising.

    2. Completely agree.

      Being a Hypocrite seems like a trend for team principals right now (Horner and Brawn are prime examples) . Brawn always used team order,s and had a number 1 driver philisophy ever since he entered the sport. In his Ferrari and Brawn Gp days it was obvious that there was one driver that had more support, and I feel it might be the same at Mercedes

    3. @jonsan Not to mention his time with the Schum at Bennetton VS Brundle/Patrese/Herbert and also Irvine at Ferrari. I mean why? Why do they need to lie? Do they think we’re all stupid?

    4. and also at Brawn GP there were some strange situations, when Rubens was penalised with dubious strategies.

    5. @jonsan, @aka-robyn, @todfod, @montreal95, @matt88: +1. My first thought was that Brawn, of all, should have kept his mouth firmly shut about this issue.

      1. Yup, have to agree with the above comments. I guess it goes against Brawn’s nature to call a team order….which is why MS/Ferrari had their subservient under contract to be subservient…hence no team orders needed…it was taken care of in the boardroom before the season(s) even began.

  5. A situation will arise when Sebastian Vettel needs a co-operative teammate. When it does, I trust Webber will vividly remember Malaysia and respond accordingly.

    Golly! You mean Mark won’t be as unselfish and cooperative as he was last year at Abu Dhabi and Brazil? Yikes, Seb’s really in trouble now!

    Who’s kidding who here? Webber has been much more of a hindrance than a help to Vettel throughout their time together. Not that Seb has done Mark any favors either, but this belief in some quarters that Seb’s success has been built on a foundation of Mark’s Barrichello-like assistance is simply laughable.

    1. True, except for the fact that if Vettel had a different team mate that never beat Alonso, then Alonso would be a 4-time world champion, and Vettel champion just the once.

      Seb’s success, like every champion in F1 history, is built on the fastest/most reliable car in the paddock. But I wouldn’t say Webber has been more of a hindrance than a help, like almost every F1 champion, he’s been a competitive team mate has kept points off other teams and helped in car development.

      1. @toro-stevo – you’ve omitted to mention though that Massa rarely finishes ahead of Alonso though and is much more complacent with team orders, in contrast to Webber who regularly ignores orders and is actually fairly competitive against his teammate.

        I would say that Webber has cost more points to his teammate than he has to Alonso honestly. So you can’t say with confidence that Alonso would be a four-time world champion had they switched teammates.

        Better to argue with the actual events than to fantasise with what might have been.

        1. Yes, although I assume you mean complicit?

          But there is a critical difference, every time Webber signs a contract with Red Bull, there is an agreement that there is no number 2 driver situation. Massa has effectively had the number 2 driver position with Ferrari for almost 3 years now. It’s apples and oranges. Would Webber have accepted taking a 5 place grid penalty so that Vettel could get the rubbered side of the track for the start of a race?

          As for facts, I had done the number crunching and I think I had used it in a thread last week, but didn’t refer to it. In detail:

          2010 changes:
          Vettel: Spain 2nd (+3), Monaco 1st (+7), Britain 6th (+2), Hungary 2nd (+3)
          Alonso: Spain 1st (+7), Monaco 5th (+2), Turkey 7th (+2), Hungary 1st (+7), Japan 2nd (+3), Brazil 2nd (+3).
          So that’s +15 for Vettel, +24 for Alonso. Alonso up by 5 points.

          2012 changes:
          Vettel: Malaysia 10th (+1), China 4th (+2), Monaco 3rd (+3), Britain 2nd (+3), Brazil 5th (+2)
          Alonso: Australia 4th (+2), China 8th (+2), Bahrain 6th (+2), Monaco 2nd (+3), Britain 1st (+7), Korea 2nd (+3).
          So that’s +11 for Vettel, +19 for Alonso.

          1. Edit: Ignore complicit, not that either.

          2. @toro-stevo
            Vettel could have won Monaco GP so +13 pts from this race makes it 24:16.
            As Vettel stayed longer with he old tires, he was gaining around 1 sec/lap until Webber went in 1:18s. The moment Vettel changed tires Webber start lapping in 1:20.

          3. I meant 2012 Monaco GP. I have no doubt that Ferrari would have made it 1-2 if they were in that position but RBR themselves will never be able to do it with their current driver pair :)

          4. there is a critical difference, every time Webber signs a contract with Red Bull, there is an agreement that there is no number 2 driver situation. Massa has effectively had the number 2 driver position with Ferrari for almost 3 years now.

            You’re saying that Massa’s contract at Ferrari specifies that he finish behind Alonso in almost every race? I don’t believe a word of that.

          5. @toro-stevo – fair enough then, but again it is still better to argue with what actually happened. Alonso could have been a four-time world champion, but he isn’t.

          6. You’re saying that Massa’s contract at Ferrari specifies that he finish behind Alonso in almost every race? I don’t believe a word of that.

            No more than I am saying that Webber being an equal driver is written into his contract. Of course it’s not written down, you’d be begging for solicitors to get involved there.
            But nobody who watches F1 could argue Massa has been anything other than the number 2 driver since Germany 2010. He has signed a contract extension since then, so he is obviously happy enough to continue with the situation.
            For Red Bull, they have stated they are equal drivers every time Webber signs another one year contract, in name if not in principle. So from the get go, if Massa in any way takes points/time off Alonso he is in trouble, it’s against the de facto agreement. Webber has supposedly equal billing, so by going fast and beating his team mate he isn’t actually doing anything wrong. Hence apples and oranges.

            @crr917
            I was only working on finishing positions. But I think this example would actually be worse for Vettel, before Vettel’s pit stop Webber was holding up Rosberg, Hamilton and Alonso (maybe Massa too?), to the point that other teams accused him of deliberately driving slowly. Webber not being there may have brought Vettel out in 6th after his last pit stop.

    2. @jonsan Well imagine if MW didn’t wave SV through as he did on lap 15(IIRC?). And that he would try to make the corner on the outside of turn 1 instead of running wide so that not to risk running into Seb, who together with Kobayashi was slow on restart? Apart from the start, when it’s notoriously difficult to concentrate on anything but yourself with losing a bunch of positions, you have nothing really. But hey, it seems that re-writing history is the favorite exercise of Vettel apologists

      1. @montreal95 – More like “re-writing history is the favorite exercise of Vettel bashers”. History doesn’t need to be re-written to boost a driver who has technically made history, rather it has to be re-written to diminish.

        1. @david-a Don’t have anything to reply to what I said above regarding Brazil? And yes I’m a proud Vettel basher for what he did in Malaysia. He’s also my 3rd favorite driver after Webber and Raikkonen(now that Koba’s gone). Criticizing his actions doesn’t mean I diminish his career achievements(except the one in Malaysia, but the way I see it there was no achievement there, the way it was done). Hell, I never even diminished my least favorite driver of all time(the Scum) achievements, even though I criticized his actions countless times and always said I respect him as one of the all time greats, even though I hate him and his conduct(sportive, fan’s hate of course). Again, criticizing=/=diminishing achievements.

          1. @montreal95

            Don’t have anything to reply to what I said above regarding Brazil?

            Well, not in particular, because my main issue was with your criticism of “Vettel apologists” in general (when to be frank, you ought to stick to the term “Vettel fan”), based on the opinion of a solitary fan, whose opinion isn’t particularly accurate.

          2. @david-a But I don’t have any problems with Vettel fans. You can consider me one such after a fashion. By “apologists” I mean those who will never even think that he’s been wrong in something and will try whatever to explain his actions favorably no matter what, like this poster.

            For example, as you can see by my name here, I’m a huge Alesi fan. However, when he ran out of fuel in Australia ’97 because he wasn’t paying attention I was furious with him! There were however Alesi apologists who said whatever just not to admit that he had messed up. That’s not a fan, some combination of a “fan” and a “boy” comes to mind. Every driver has them. SV is no exception

          3. @montreal95
            Alright then, fair enough.

            For example, as you can see by my name here, I’m a huge Alesi fan. However, when he ran out of fuel in Australia ’97 because he wasn’t paying attention I was furious with him!

            Similarly, I remember what I thought and even posted back at Spa 2010 about Vettel!

          4. By “apologists” I mean those who will never even think that he’s been wrong in something and will try whatever to explain his actions favorably no matter what, like this poster.

            I’m not a “Vettel apologist”. Truth be told Vettel is not my first or second choice to win the 2013 WDC. I get stuck defending him because large numbers of people around here keep telling outrageous whoppers about this one driver. I’m talking lies of a “The Sahara Desert is the wettest place on Earth” sort. If I see people telling similar lies about some other driver, I’ll defend that other driver as well.

            The quality (or lack of it) of his detractors is the principle reason why, if Vettel wins the WDC again this year, I’ll be pleased.

            On this very thread there’s somebody repeating the tired old canard about Vettel being crash prone. This is not actually a matter of debate – he’s not crash prone, not compared to Alonso, Webber, or Hamilton. That’s just reality. The facts are what they are.

          5. @jonsan I agree with you, that some things that were said to criticize SV were outrageous, blatant lies. However, by responding the way you did you’re only making things worse. As I proved above some things you’d said were also factually incorrect. I understand that you feel the need to defend a driver under a savage attack but there’s no need to resort to this

            For my part I believe that SV was in the wrong in Malaysia and that it’ll hurt him in the future. Nowhere did I say he was an evil child-eating monster.

          6. As I proved above some things you’d said were also factually incorrect.

            Remind me where you did that again? I scoffed at the claim that Webber was a (and I quote) “cooperative teammate”. You responded with the true but irrelevant observation that Webber sometimes takes points off Alonso. Not the same thing at all.

            I’m quite certain the threat that Webber would not be “cooperative” did NOT mean that Webber would deliberately finish behind Alonso for the rest of the season. You’re doing battle with a strawman there, not with anything I’ve said.

      2. @montreal95

        “Remember we started last year 1.6s behind and by July we had the best car.” That’s how you rewrite history…

        1. @pandaslap hh The part where they were 1.6 sec. off the pace is true enough. The other part though is shocking. Next he’ll say that they also remained best car from July to November!

      3. it seems that re-writing history is the favorite exercise of Vettel apologists

        History is on the side of “Vettel apologists”. History records his 38 poles, 27 wins, 48 podiums, 3 WDC’s and all the rest. It’s the Vettel-bashers who have to resort to re-writing history.

        Well imagine if MW didn’t wave SV through as he did on lap 15(IIRC?)

        You don’t recall correctly.

        1. @jonsan “You don’t recall correctly”. But I did! It was on lap 12 not lap 15 but it happened definitely(I have the race recorded so could check the lap). So it’s either YOU don’t remember correctly or you’re re-writing history again

          And you also clearly don’t understand the concept of history. As I’d mentioned in a reply to @david-a above, If you think that SV achievements allow him to do whatever unsporting acts he wants without being bashed for it, then you need to go back to school again

          1. It was on lap 12 not lap 15 but it happened definitely(I have the race recorded so could check the lap).

            And you see Webber stick his hand out of his cockpit and wave Vettel past? Really? I think you need to check it again.

          2. If you think that SV achievements allow him to do whatever unsporting acts he wants

            I don’t see a driver passing another driver on the race track as an “unsporting act”.

            Alonso parking his car at the pit exit so Hamilton could not get out? That’s an unsporting act. Schumacher crashing into Hill or Senna into Prost? Those were unsporting acts. There is nothing unsporting about passing a slower driver on the race track.

          3. @jonsan Hitting someone with one hand tied behind his back is an unsporting act you think? If yes, then how is passing a driver who turned his engine down because of pre-race agreed(by both) team orders is a sporting act? SV should have said before the race that he doesn’t agree to any such non-sense. That would earn him the admiration and respect of many millions of fans instead of the scorn he’s getting now.

            Moreover, instead of moaning over a team radio at half-distance he could’ve tried to overtake Webber. Instead he moaned for a team order when that suited him. When it didn’t suit him any longer, suddenly team orders are not ok for him. It’s this aspect that angers me most about this:either you’re for team orders or you are against team orders Seb. You cannot have your cake and eat it

        2. Hitting someone with one hand tied behind his back is an unsporting act you think?

          That’s an utterly absurd analogy. Really, why not just liken Vettel to somebody who sneaks up behind you and bashes you with a club? For somebody trying to pose as the Voice of Reason here, you come out with some remarkably inflammatory remarks.

          how is passing a driver who turned his engine down

          Webber did not “turn his engine down”. If he did, he did so AFTER Vettel passed him. I’m tired of pointing out that Webber cut by far his fastest lap of the entire race while battling Vettel for the lead, but it seems I must keep reminding people of it.

          he moaned for a team order when that suited him. When it didn’t suit him any longer, suddenly team orders are not ok for him.

          Sounds exactly like every other driver in F1, very much including a certain Mark Webber, doesn’t it? Actually, I don’t recall Vettel pouting and moaning after the various instances where Webber defied team orders. After Slverstone, Seb defended Mark.

          either you’re for team orders or you are against team orders Seb

          If you have said the same thing to Mark than a least you’re consistent. Wrong, but consistent. Have you said the same about Webber, who has been very vocally on both sides of the team orders issue?

    3. +1,000,000

      You’ve restored my faith in humanity.

      1. (@jonsan)

        Alonso parking his car at the pit exit so Hamilton could not get out? That’s an unsporting act. Schumacher crashing into Hill or Senna into Prost

        Although it’s not as bad at this, Vettel’s passing of Webber was unsporting – he could have comfortably maintained the gap, but was following team orders to slow down and preserve the engines. Whether you like team orders or not (and I don’t), simply saying “there is nothing unsporting about passing a slower driver on the race track” completely overlooks the fact that Mark has been asked to slow – he fully had the wherewithal to speed up again, and had gotten out in front by virtue of superior tyre selection.

        1. @sgt-pepper: But they raced for it about 2 laps. If Webber had the tires and fuel left for it, he could have kept Vettel behind. Vettel didn’t reel in the gap because Webber had slowed down. Vettel pushed up to the last pit-stop and his side of the garage used the stop to try to get him out in front of Webber. It almost happened, and because of the disappointment of that near miss, Vettel didn’t stick to the pre-race agreement. I understand how that can happen – like Schumachers fake accident in Monaco Qualifying etc.. Because of the race strategies and the length of a race, of course this kind of pre-race agreements shouldn’t be made. I hope Vettels action has made more of the field aware of this. At the end of 2013 the points table will prove Vettel’s instinct right and RB Team orders wrong. I strongly respect any racer with that instinct – it is Formula 1 after all. Remember no 2 is just the first of the losers.

          1. (@palle)

            I strongly respect any racer with that instinct – it is Formula 1 after all. Remember no 2 is just the first of the losers.

            What an utterly unpleasant view of racing. I feel that racing is more than merely ‘victory at all costs,’ and call me old-fashioned but I respect drivers like Coulthard and Prost, those who know that there’s more to life than simply winning. To me instances like Australia (’98 I think) are signs of true men, they had agreed whoever got to the first corner first would win the race so they didn’t have to race each other for the entire grand prix and put their cars under pressure etc. Coulthard respected this agreement, and even when Hakkinen accidentally ended up behind, he was true to his word.

            Even tales like the pact between Villeneuve and Zonta to do Eau Rouge flat out, or I think it was Alesi and Berger shaking hands/hugging after a great, race long battle are to me what F1 is truly about. It saddens me that drivers like Webber now appears abit of a Dinosaur compared to this new cutthroat, Schumacher type attitude that’s been brought in. The era of gentleman racers seems truly dead.

        2. (Webber) fully had the wherewithal to speed up again

          Not only did he have the wherewithal to speed up again, he did in fact speed up again. He recorded by far his fastest lap of the race while fighting Vettel for the lead. I realize that this fact is very inconvenient for those people who wish to believe that Webber was “fighting with one hand tied behind his back”, but reality can’t be wished away just because you don’t like it.

          the fact that Mark has been asked to slow

          Vettel was “asked to slow” repeatedly in the earlier sections of the race and told that there was still half the race to go and that he should be patient.. Contra what some people seem to believe, Vettel and Webber were not racing freely prior to the last pit stops. The belief that Webber was “ahead on merit” before Vettel “double-crossed him” can’t withstand even a casual acquaintanceship with the facts.

          The people who made complete fools of themselves in this instance were Red Bull management, who kept telling Vettel to maintain a 3 second gap behind Webber – while Hamilton was less than 3 seconds behind Webber!

  6. if Vettel had a different team mate that never beat Alonso, then Alonso would be a 4-time world champion

    You’re making some big assumptions there. Perhaps if Vettel had a Massa-like or Barrichello-like teammate who doesn’t take points from him he is already a 4-time champion and chasing his 5th this year?

    That’s obviously highly debatable and ultimately unknowable. We do know for a fact that Webber has been an uncooperative teammate up until now, and that threats of his becoming more uncooperative seem faintly ridiculous.

    I wouldn’t say Webber has been more of a hindrance than a help

    I’d say you’d have to go back to Hamilton and Alonso in 2007 to find two drivers who hindered one another more. In their case it was somewhat more understandable, as they were both in contention for the WDC throughout the year.

    I can’t recall EVER seeing a driver, himself out of contention for the WDC, pull the stunts Webber pulled against his teammate last year. If you know of any such happenings in the history of F1 then feel free to share them.

    1. Despite all the arguments that Webber isn’t a team player and that he has no right to complain about Vettel failing to respect the order in Malaysia because he doesn’t respect orders that are given to him, I am consistently bemused that everyone criticising him has totally ignored the way Red Bull have gotten the outcomes they wanted in the races where Webber ignored orders. He was told to maintain the gap to Vettel at Silverstone in 2011, and ignored the instruction – but Vettel still finished ahead of him. That’s a far cry from Vettel being told to maintain his position in Malaysia, but ignoring the order and passing him.

      Mark Webber is very, very good at getting the media and the public to side with him. It’s probably not that difficult, given some of the personalities in the team, and so it wouldn’t surprise me if his actions on track are often a clever ruse. He ignores team orders just enough to give the apperance of independence, but knows precisely what he can get away with, and thus does not go so far as to totally defy an order, which keeps him in good standing with the team.

      1. He was told to maintain the gap to Vettel at Silverstone in 2011, and ignored the instruction – but Vettel still finished ahead of him. That’s a far cry from Vettel being told to maintain his position in Malaysia, but ignoring the order and passing him.

        I’m not sure what point you are trying to make there. Is it that Vettel is a faster driver than Webber? I think we can take that as a given, considering their respective results over the last few years. Or are you implying that Red Bull “got the outcome they wanted” in Sepang – in which case you must think that that team orders to Vettel to hold station were a ruse intended to fool Webber? I mean it – I don’t know what you’re trying to say here.

        Mark Webber is very, very good at getting the media and the public to side with him. It’s probably not that difficult ..

        .. given the proclivities of the English-speaking media, which has consistently failed to inform casual fans of Webbers own actions and words with respect to team orders. For instance –

        http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/14145893

        He ignores team orders just enough to give the apperance of independence, but knows precisely what he can get away with, and thus does not go so far as to totally defy an order

        Then you think Mark Webber is a conniving liar? Sounds like you have a much worse opinion of him than I do.

    2. Perhaps if Vettel had a Massa-like or Barrichello-like teammate who doesn’t take points from him he is already a 4-time champion and chasing his 5th this year?

      Isn’t this the biggest assumption of them all?

      The year you’re talking about (2009) saw the following team mate results:

      Button 95 pts : Barrichello 77 pts
      Vettel 84 pts : Webber 69.5 pts
      Alonso 26 pts : Massa 22 pts

      Doesn’t look like Barrichello’s or Massa’s relative performance was that much different from Webber’s.

      It would also be interesting to actually calculate how many points Alonso lost these last three years by having Webber in front of him; and how many did Vettel lose by having Massa beating him.

      1. Alonso 26 pts : Massa 22 pts

        2009? Wasn’t Alonso driving a Renault and wasn’t Massa injured for 50% of the races?

        But regarding your last sentence: I calculated that if Massa would have finished one place behind Alonso in every race both of them finished, Alonso would have won the championship in 2010 and 2012.

        1. You’re right, it’s a faulty piece of argument. I was over-extrapolating their partnership :-)

        2. @andae23 – then again though, what effect would Webber finishing one place behind Vettel in every race in those seasons have on his position in the final standings? It works both ways.

          @prisoner-monkeys – he failed to beat Vettel in Silverstone, that is the only difference. The intent was exactly the same, and that is all that matters.

          1. You have no evidence that the intention was the same.

      2. Isn’t this the biggest assumption of them all?

        I’m not making that assumption, I’m merely pointing out the futility of trying to imagine these “what if such-and-such a driver had a different team-mate” scenarios.

        I repeat – I don’t recall EVER seeing a driver, himself out of the WDC, pull the stunts against his WDC chasing teammate which Webber pulled last year. And I’m still waiting for you to cite examples to prove me wrong.

    3. Perhaps if Vettel had a Massa-like or Barrichello-like teammate who doesn’t take points from him he is already a 4-time champion and chasing his 5th this year?

      Well yes, except you would have to ignore Brawn cleaning up 6 of the first 7 races of 2009 for that to happen. Unless team orders extend to Webber playing Piquet Jnr every race, in which case perhaps…

      But for 2010 and 2012 which are the two years I’m referring to, I was illustrating a point simply through positional changes as to the effectiveness of a competitive team mate.
      2010: assuming Webber always finishes lower than both Vettel and Alonso, then Alonso gets 276 points to Vettel’s 271.
      2012, same again, Alonso 297 vs Vettel 292.

      Now of course there are other things which such a scenario would change (i.e. Turkey 2010) but that’s beyond what I’m showing here. All I’m showing here, is that there is a tangible benefit having a team mate who took points off Alonso 6 times each in 2010 in 2012, even if he takes points off you 4 times in each of those years.

      I’d say you’d have to go back to Hamilton and Alonso in 2007 to find two drivers who hindered one another more. In their case it was somewhat more understandable, as they were both in contention for the WDC throughout the year.

      In 2010, Vettel was never in the lead of the drivers championship until right at the end, whereas Webber led after a number of races. If you were to apply team orders purely on championship position, then Webber would have been given the rub more often than Seb. Vettel was therefore the hindrance to Webber yes?

      But there’s very little I can think to attribute to Webber alone which has been a direct hindrance to Vettel, unless the increasingly occasional better drive or fatest quali lap counts? The hard line in corner 1 Brazil last year, albeit it a huge moment, is about all I can really think of.

      1. In 2010, Vettel was never in the lead of the drivers championship until right at the end, whereas Webber led after a number of races. If you were to apply team orders purely on championship position, then Webber would have been given the rub more often than Seb.

        And that is precisely what the so-called “favoritism” towards Vettel amounts to – that Red Bull did not order Vettel to finish behind Webber in 2010!

        The media put words to that effect in Webbers mouth and then reported them as fact.

        http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/motorsport/formula_one/9161758.stm


        Webber’s remarks came in a news conference in which he was quizzed on the team’s unwillingness to put their weight behind him as their best way of beating Alonso.

        After a number of responses in which he was clearly searching for the right way to respond to the line of questioning, it was suggested to him that he still seemed to think the team were not fully behind him.

        .. when it was then suggested that he did not feel the team were emotionally behind him, he replied: “It’s obvious, isn’t it?

        This is the “favoritism towards Vettel” which so many fans and members of the press are wound up about – the failure of Red Bull to employ team orders to benefit Webber. Never mind that RB have not employed such orders to benefit Vettel either.

  7. 45 years ago, Formula 1 lost one of its legends. Aside from being one of the best drivers in F1 history, arguably the best, he is imo one of the most admirable characters in Formula 1.

    It’s just amazing to see how far Formula 1 has come in 45 years: at the time of Clark’s accident, the sport was in shock: if Clark could get killed, then any driver could potentially get killed as well. Death was almost an aspect of Formula 1 back in those days. Thankfully a driver fatility in F1 hasn’t happened in 19 years and the last time a marshall died was also a long time ago (can’t remember the exact year). I think a lot of people are taking safety in F1 for granted – well, we’ve come pretty close in the last five years (Massa 2009 Hungary, Liuzzi/Schumacher Abu Dhabi 2010, Trulli/Chandhok 2010 Monaco, Alonso/Grosjean 2013 Spa) and a fatality in F1 will undoubtebly happen again. But for now, let’s just be greatful of the effort many people have put into making F1 as safe as it is today.

    1. Well said +1

    2. @andae23 +2!!! Btw last marshal to die was Graham Beveridge, Australian GP 2001

      1. Ah yes, Villeneuve’s crash at turn 3. Couldn’t remember if the Monza crash came before or after this accident… I’m a bit lazy today :P

    3. ADMIRATION TO MATURITY!!!

  8. “Team orders against my sporting nature”

    Yeah right. I’m sure Barrichello will have something to say about that.

  9. Initially, only Hamilton was marginal on fuel, but now it is being stated that Rosberg was also marginal on fuel. Whether this is just PR to cover themselves, we’ll never know. I do however wonder, why Hamilton saw fit to re-pass Rosberg twice, if he was supposed to be on fuel saving mode. Seems to me that Rosberg was told to hold station because Hamilton wouldn’t settle for letting him get in front, thus Brawn’s instructions. If Hamilton was set on beating Rosberg, come what may, then Brawn had a driver instruction problem with Hamilton.

  10. Clark was best. Almost never do I utter or type such words, but Clark was best. On the race track and off there are seldom a better race car driver or gentleman. Jim Clark is the reason i became interested in Formula One. As a young boy in America who followed the Indy 500 every year I became fascinated with Jim Clark and interested in what other races he drove in. Viewing F1 then was usually done some time after the race in the form of highlights. Still became fascinated with F1 and over the years viewing got better. Would I be a fan of F1 had it not been for the accomplishments of the likes of Jim Clark, Mario Andretti, Dan Gurney and others with their race anywhere anytime attitudes? Who knows. 45 years later I still thank you, Jim Clark. Clark was best.

    @keithcollantine – Thanks for the reminder.

  11. If Brawn had any sense, surely he should have ordered his drivers to make a pass each on DRS on each straight, using it as a tool to lower each car’s fuel consumption whilst maintaining position and pace. Both drivers would then have to really work together as a team, but surely this is what we have been told all along- no driver is bigger than the team. The two DRS with two detection points would have allowed this nicely…

    1. Doing the DRS Passing/Repassing would mean both cars using More Revs & More speed which = more fuel consumption.

      Best way of saving fuel in a racing car when your as critical as Merc seemed to be is turning fuel-mixture down, reducing revs/speed & lifting off/coasting into the corners to reduce how much braking is required.

      1. Yes, agreed, BUT… Only if racing. It is surely more economical to engage DRS even if they don’t go to top speed? If HAM was struggling that much, it might even have been better for ROS to overtake just before the DRS detection, then have HAM follow using DRS. It is only a theory of mine, but I think there’s some mileage in it (no pun intended!)

  12. Brazil 2003 was a great race. I remember all the commentators saying yes kimi has won on count back(thats the bit the article gets wrong). But i was furious as the count back should be on fully completed laps. Kimi had crossed the line but no one else really had. I was convinced Fisi won the race. Then i remember reading teletext later in the week saying they had given him the win!

    Madness that they got it wrong.

    1. Biggest reason that happened is that the race stewards ignored the timing system & did a count-back manually despite the fact the timing system had already done it automatically. They didn’t believe Fisichella had started another lap before the red flag came out so ignored that lap & did the count-back manually from the previous lap.

      Actually a part of what caused that was the closure of the F1 Digital+ PPV TV service because For 2003 we were back to a fairly standard & basic timing system based only on the timing points you see on the TV coverage.

      On F1 Digital+ we had a lot of additional timing/tracking systems & were running the timing systems. With the additional stuff we had in 2002 (And provided to teams as well as the stewards & FIA race control) we would have immediately flagged up exactly where each car was the very second the red flag came out as part of the tracking system & this would also have given current lap number & shown that the lap count-back was done automatically.

      1. thanks for the info. still madness that i could work it out at home and they couldnt lol

        The digital coverage was good. Tho at £12 a go it was extremely expensive!

        1. Tho at £12 a go it was extremely expensive!

          Indeed, I remember saying at the time we should have had it priced closer to £5 a race.

          In other country’s that took the service it was offered as part of the broadcasters sports package rather than as a PPV service like it was in the UK for 2002. In the country’s where it was available like this it did better & Germany & Italy continued to offer multi-channel services after F1 Digital+ closed down.

          Only reason it ended up been PPV in the UK was because FOM were running it ourselfs from the FOM buildings at Biggin Hill. Had Sky got involved & brought the service it almost certainly would have ended up on one of there existing sports channels as part of there sports package.

  13. Wow so Brawn has been going against his sporting nature all throughout his sporting career?!

  14. When I saw the title I thought of one word. ********. He did it all the time t Ferrari, and if he’s let the 2 drivers race before, why not now?

  15. I’m sure i heard somewhere during race weekend that the main reason Lewis was under fueled for the race was more a mistake from the garage side than him pushing to hard early on.
    So I guess from that point of view you can really blame Ross for not letting Nico pass.. why should lewis have to lose out on a position he earned during the 1st two stints because of a balls up by his team right?

    1. you can’t* really blame..

    2. @nemo87 – then again, why should Nico have to lose out on a podium because of a balls-up on Lewis’ side of the garage? I think that’s more unjust than if he’d been allowed to overtake.

      1. Fair shout. It’s tit-for-tat I guess :/

        1. Yeah the way I think of it, because I see both sides you two are pointing out, is that I’d rather see NR have to hold station because they didn’t want to punish LH for the team deciding on one strategy of LH and another slightly different one for NR, when it is race 2 of the season and they are still learning about their cars and the relationship between the car and this year’s tires.

          They learned that in the long run NR’s strategy was better, so I expect that this shouldn’t happen again. They know more now than they did before the start of the Malaysian GP. Particularly about their fuel economy.

          Bottom line for me…whatever the reason for the Merc team order, I was not left with the impression that this means they are going to favour LH for the rest of the season, nor that this was hugely political. LH was very humble about it, and NR very sporting. I think this was something the team is already past, and they are probably, post-Malaysia, just stoked that they were as competitive as they were in spite of their fuel issues. I feel there is likely no negative atmosphere on the team as a result of Malaysian events, especially as opposed to the atmosphere that SV has now created at Red Bull.

  16. WilliamB (@william-brierty)
    7th April 2013, 11:23

    EMERGENCY!!!! Does anyone know where I can watch Race 2 of FR3.5???????? It’s not on Eurosport!!!!! Help!!!!!!

    On a calmer note, Stoffel Vandoorne was epic yesterday. However I can’t help but think that had he more pressure from the short-lived “da Costa charge”, Vandoorne’s flat-spot would’ve cost him the race. Had da Costa not had a puncture yesterday, da Costa would’ve won, of that there is no question, but that still doesn’t detract from this immense talent that have seemingly lept into everyone’s attention.

    1. I’ve got the same question – I really want to watch it too!

  17. ‘[Sebastian Vettel’s] engine was turned down, but not as much as Mark’s due to differing strategies and tyre wear,’ said a spokesperson.”

    Which could have been a part of the plan.

  18. “I didn’t like having to give the orders I gave in Malaysia, it’s not in my sporting nature and I think the team have demonstrated many times in the past that we are very happy to let our drivers race each other.”

    So why give the order ?

    1. Thats a good question. Only thing I can think of is Hamilton contract or just simply the fact that it was Malaysia (Petronas), Hamilton is a bigger name and a podium was at stake. For me it was really painfull to watch Rosberg struggling behind Hamilton, not allowed to pass.
      With such help from the pitlane, Hamilton will surely outrace Rosberg this year :/

      1. I’ve been taking the glass-half-full attitude on this. I’d like to think they simply did not want to punish LH for a strategy that the whole team decided upon, that didn’t quite work out as well as NR’s. LH qualified higher, and stayed ahead of NR through the first two thirds of the race in spite of NR always reeling him in after their pits, and also, as the newby on the team maybe they wanted to throw LH a bone. I simply refuse to believe, and everything about this says to me, that this was not a team order that now means LH is the number one on the team. This is a team that is not likely expecting they are going to win the WCC or WDC this year, and their main goal will be to be better than last year, such as to finish in a strong 4th in the WCC, and if they’re really lucky, a weak 3rd, so I really doubt the team order means much in the grand scheme of things. Their main goal will be to progress the team toward the top 3, and to squelch one driver psychologically, the more engrained one, that obviously has no pace issues, after race 2, when they likely won’t either of them be fighting for the WDC, would make absolutely no sense.

  19. That’s got to be the most ridiculous account of that Brazilian GP I’ve ever read. Kimi and Fisi were due to stop again too, by taking the earlier stop DC was a cert for the win until it was red flagged. Talk about revisionist history.

    1. Fischella would definetely not have finished without another pitstop as stated in Eddie Jordan’s autobiography. Kimi surely needed a pitstop as well. was some race

  20. Ross Brawn is a great leader and a fine T.P. under whom I’ve no doubt it would be a joy to compete, for the right-minded driver.

    1. @joepa: For the driver being designated with the lowest number in the team pecking order, You are absolutely right. The other driver must keep fighting his mixed feelings about weather he would be able to make the cut in another team and become the lead driver there, or stay where he is and subdue to the conditions, hoping for a miracle a la Schumi breaking a leg.

      1. @palle – I actually don’t think it’s that hard for a driver w/ the right mindset to accept team orders, and become a #2 if necessary. Just look at how well Massa adapted to that role, and how he’s finding some prestige again, even as he labors loyally for Alonso. When a sportsman is paid handsomely for his services, he has a responsibility to his team/employer that trumps Ego, b/c it’s the team/employer that fattens the bank account and guarantees his family’s future. Why throw all that away on a petulant whim? I wouldn’t. Cheers!

        1. Trust me, it is very hard for them. The large pay becomes a habit and it is not because of the money that they do it. To reach that level You have to love what You do, the motivation doesn’t come from the money – just ask any successful entrepreneur – the money is a nice side effect of working dedicated at a high level.
          And You’re not right about Massa – he has had massive problems of going from being a WDC for a few seconds to become a new Barrichello. His lack of results was a result of a kind of depression after his accident. It is a known fact that it takes years to get over a depression. It seems he has recovered by now, and probably he has accepted his role, but for that to take 3 years – I wouldn’t call that easy. I’m shaking my head over Ferraris patience with him, but good to see him back, except it will be better for Alonso.

  21. I can’t believe this, look who’s talking. Mr. Brawn was the master of fraud during his Ferrari and Brawn years. Shut your mouth Ross and stay behind now, you deserve this.

  22. @stg-pepper: You said: “It saddens me that drivers like Webber now appears abit of a Dinosaur compared to this new cutthroat, Schumacher type attitude that’s been brought in. The era of gentleman racers seems truly dead.”
    Welcome to the real world – If You haven’t realised it yet, then I can inform You that Webber certainly isn’t that type of Dinosaur gentleman racer either. His previous actions has clearly stated that he is just as selfish as anyone on the grid. The true competitive racer wants to win at all cost and more than once he steps out of line to investigate precisely how the rules are and if some rules are bendable. If they don’t have these abilities they don’t belong in F1. The Gentleman racer is just a nostalgic whim – maybe he never existed? The Schumacher type was there before Schumacher – Senna and Prost wasn’t Gentlemen racers either.

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