Tires contribute to thrilling Chinese F1 race

April 18, 2011

Hamilton took the lead with four laps to go, while Vettel was forced to defend his second-place position from Jenson Button in the other McLaren and his Red Bull team mate Mark Webber.

After another exciting finale, Hamilton was followed home by Vettel who maintains his championship lead. Tire strategy proved crucial to the outcome of the race, with the McLarens opting for a three-stop strategy while Red Bull selected two stops for Vettel and three stops for Mark Webber, who started from 18th on the grid after hitting problems on Saturday during free practice and qualifying.

Webber’s early exit from qualifying meant that he was able to save three sets of soft P Zero tires for the race, which he was able to use to devastating effect on Sunday. Having worked his way through the field by sprinting between his three pit stops, Webber was able to climb onto the podium by passing Button on the penultimate lap.

Vettel was able to make his two-stop strategy work right up to the closing stages but he was completing a much longer stint on the hard tires than his rivals, setting up a thrilling finish in which the top six were covered by just 15 seconds. There was plenty of overtaking in a lively race from start to finish, thanks to some thrilling battles featuring multiple world champions Michael Schumacher and Fernando Alonso, as well as some of the new and exciting talents to emerge in the sport such as Sergio Perez and Kamui Kobayashi.

Once more this year the weather remained dry throughout the weekend, with the race starting in ambient temperatures of 72 degrees Fahrenheit and a track temperature of 86 degrees Fahrenheit. All the drivers apart from Webber started the race on the soft tire, with the teams split between two and three stop strategies. A notable exception was HRT driver Narain Karthikeyan, who was classified 23rd after stopping only once on lap 23. The fastest lap of the race, set by Webber (1m38.993s) was also considerably quicker than the fastest race lap set by Hamilton last year (1m42.061s) – during which there were some periods of light rain.

“The races just seem to keep on getting better and better this year,” exclaimed Pirelli’s Motorsport Director Paul Hembery.  “I think nobody watching really knew how it was going to finish until the very end, which is exactly what we wanted to achieve when we started our Formula One project. We saw an interesting split of strategies, with McLaren managing to make three stops work for Hamilton but Red Bull coming very close to winning with just two. Compared to Malaysia we experienced a lot less degradation, with some drivers managing to get 20 laps or more out of the hard tire. We didn’t experience an excessive amount of the toffee-like ‘marbles’ out on track and it was clear that this race was won and lost on tire strategy. The end result was that all the leading runners were very close together at the finish, and the people who had looked after their tires best took the top results. It’s hard to imagine how we can top this at the next grand prix in Turkey, but we’re certainly going to try to have something just as good.”