Grand Prix 2012 United States Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

Yeehaw!
Saddle up and let's mosey on down to Texas for the penultimate round of the 2012 season.

(Okay, that's quite enough of that...)

If it wasn't for the fact that Red Bull and Vettel have all but tied both titles up, this would be one of the most exciting ends to a season for a while.

What we should have had is two or three drivers on approximately level points heading to an unknown circuit, which by all accounts looks like it's going to be a challenge for even the best drivers. Turn one in particular is a blind left at the crest of a hill, which could either make or break the race.
Instead, what we have is a dominant Red Bull who need just four points to take the Constructors' title and Sebastian Vettel who only needs to outscore Fernando Alonso by 15 points or more over the next two rounds to take the Drivers'.

The wheels have come off at McLaren with yet another retirement for Hamilton when leading comfortably at Abu Dhabi; this time due to a faulty fuel pump. McLaren have prosecuted a dreadful campaing this year; without doubt they should have been in a position to take both titles and instead they are unlikely to even be runners up in both.
Where did it all go wrong?

Renault scored their first victory of the season with Kimi Räikkönen. Apparently it was "nothing to jump around about" so we'll say no more.

Mercedes had another race to forget with both cars finishing outside the top 10. Again. One has to hope that this is not a precursor to next season's performance and the redesigned car will be a lot more competitive. They may be able to hang on to fifth in the Constructors' but that will be dependent on how many points the Sauber drivers squander, of which Pérez has been doing an admirable job since he signed for McLaren.

Force India and Williams are in their own private battle in both championships but the Force Indias are in the driving seat (thank you, I'm here all week) and look as if they will just have the edge.

Sadly, for another year, the three "new" teams still occupy all of the bottom places. Caterham had an opportunity during last week's race of attrition to jump Marussia into 10th place, which they currently hold thanks to Timo Glock's 12th place finish at Singapore, but Kovalainen was overtaken in the closing stages. The really sad part is I can't see this ever being any different; the step change in performance required to breach the gap just seems to be unattainable.

For those who haven't seen the circuit, this is the view from the start-finish straight to turn one:
austin-straight-jpg.5108


Here's an onboard lap:

Galahad's circuit write up is here: http://cliptheapex.com/pages/circuit-of-the-americas/

Burgers, weak beer and popcorn are available from the concession stands (OK, OK, I'll stop now :D)
 
Don't know. My username is Badillionaire (thanks to my brother). Although that's my Sony username. I think I might have an ExtremeNinja username in the game but I don't know which would come up. I've never played online before.

[Edit] Just seen your edit which has remedied my confusion.
 
Cool. Race soon, then. I think we have inadvertently hi-jacked this thread. Sorry to whoever ends up moving these posts.

Night night folks. I have a real-world race tomorrow at Rye House and really shouldn't still be sitting here like a zombie at this hour.
 
I think there will be 2 major factors to this race, which make it intriguing depending on how you look at it:
  1. The main one in my opinion is tyre warm up. Alonso has commented that teams are ideally going to want to pit as late as possible because on a cold set of primes they could be several seconds slower (similar but much more extreme to Monaco this year). Could we see teams pitting on the penultimate lap if somehow the tyres hang on? Could this be Alonso's joker against Vettel? It will also be very interesting to see who gets the tyres working quickly at the start of the race because this is likely to make a big difference.
  2. The second thing is traffic. Drivers have said that through the 1st sector you lose several seconds in traffic because there's no where for drivers to go. If the back markers go off-line they risk crashing, so you could see someone's race changed for the better or worse due to traffic.
Add to this the fact that plenty of drivers think overtaking could be suicidal and the start / first corner is a complete lottery and I think there's certainly plenty to look forward to :)
 
Not only is Alonso on the slow side of the track, Grosjean and Maldonado are directly behind him.

Who fancies another Kimi win? :)
 
Yes I think it's unlikely too. But if Hamilton has more unreliability, maybe there's an outside chance. Schumi has never been a favourite of mine but I've admired him coming back and sticking at it. It would be nice if he left his come back with a win.
 
And of course, he's not going to jump Vettel from the start, for that we're relying on the Evens not being as bad as predicted (or less likely) Webber.
 
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