Cynon wrote:Lucas di Grassi - I don't care what the excuse is, you joined a rare list of drivers, Roberto Guerrero, Alain Prost, Kevin Cogan, and everyone who Adrian Fernandez took out in the 1996 US500 as drivers who CRASHED before the START of a race.
If it was down to driver error, I would agree, but the team are investigating the possibilty that Di Grassi suffered from a mechanical failure - so we will have to see what the team finds on the car. It could well be that something went wrong, because the team couldn't contact him via radio, and some of the telemetry systems on board failed prior to the accident - but we will have to wait for their analysis.
Hamilton has had pretty bad luck this weekend - a difficult Friday session, a replacement gearbox and finally a loss of 3rd in the race. In some ways, he was fortunate to make it to the end, but surely he is going to need a new gearbox, which will mean another penalty at a time when he can least afford it. Button, meanwhile, tried his best with a different strategy, but that early, and fairly long, safety car period hurt him badly, as the leaders could nurse their tyres easily, and then nail him on the prime tyres when they switched. It was an ok weekend for Mclaren, but unless Mclaren have a 1-2 in Korea, you sense that they have just fallen a bit too far behind, both on the track and in the points.
But at a time when he is under pressure to take points off the Red Bull and Mclaren drivers, and when there is increasing speculation around his seat,
Felipe Massa gave us a perfect example of how not to do it. A poor qualifying session whe he failed to make it into Q3, compounded by taking out Liuzzi in an overly ambitious move; that was a woeful day for Felipe.
Massa is, frankly, lucky that Rosberg had a mechanical failure, otherwise he would have fallen behind Rosberg in the standings - when Massa has had the better car.