Grand Prix 2013 Belgian Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

After a drawn-out summer break, where the drivers & their WAGs will have turned themselves orange, Adrian Newey et al will have flouted the factory shutdown rule, and Fernando Alonso will have groomed his frankly excellent beard/moustache combo, Formula 1 returns to the majestic, wonderful, brilliant, exciting, thrilling, fantastic Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Belgium for the Belgian Grand Prix. The longest circuit on the calendar (7.004 km, if you're interested) is packed full of character, from the tight La Source at the beginning of the lap, the (unfortunately) flat-out Eau Rouge, the double-apexed Pouhon corner and the terrifying Blachimont, all set in the middle of the forest with its own micro-climate. There was doubt a couple of years ago about the race's place on the calendar, but thankfully these have been resolved and the Belgian GP is guaranteed a spot on the calendar until at least 2015. We should hope that the teams pressure Bernie into keeping the race on the calendar, as this is a circuit that always produces a good/controversial/exciting race.
More than any other race, the Belgian Grand Prix has been hugely affected by the weather (the circuit can even be wet at one end and dry at the other), most memorably during the chaotic 1998 race where Jordan got their first (and only) 1-2, or the last-lap deluge in 2008 which featured the memorable battle between Hamilton and Raikkonen, and that stewards decision (but please try and refrain from arguing about it - the horse has been well and truly flogged).
Set-up wise, Spa is traditionally a lower-downforce circuit, although Red Bull have used a higher-downforce approach to be fast in sector 2; this has paid dividends - Vettel won here in 2011. Of course, with such a temperamental climate, any whiff of rain on race day will make the race a lottery. With the Lotii, Mercs and Red Bulls seemingly looking fast, they are the cars who you would bet your Brogans (courtesy of cider_and_toast ), for the race and with the Fewwwawi's (courtesy of Jonathan Ross) going backwards. But anything can happen in Formula 1, and it usually does.

In terms of the championship, Vettel is winning, but with the consistent Lotus Raikkonen and the seemingly tyre-issue free Mercedes, we could be in for an exciting race & exciting end to the season (well, apart from in Korea & India ;))

Spa and Monza are the last two legs of the European season, before a series of flyaway races that make up the final leg of the 2013 season and, as we saw last year, every point counts!!!

So.... Ready, Steady, Discuss!!
 
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Genuinely don't understand how anyone could disagree. The Maldonado/ Di Resta incident still didn't liven it up.

And seriously why was Perez given a drive-through? If Grosjean hits his brakes properly he doesn't go off the track, Perez didn't force him off at all. More health and safety shite from the stewards as per.
 
I seriously dislike it when a driver pushes another one off track, but the one with Perez was minor and wasn't a worthy of a penalty.

This race has been very boring, only Raikkonen, Guitterez, Maldonado and the two Force India's livened it up for a while.
 
If one driver has an exceptional drive that stops a race from being described as dire I would have thought. Vettel has been flawless, Hamilton has got the maximum from his car and Alonso from 9th on the grid to second is without a doubt exceptional. This race has been pure GP racing, if you find it boring maybe you should watch GP2 which is sprint racing and forget about watching F1.
 
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I'd normally agree Kewee but you knew in the first few laps he was going to get second. Would have liked him to challenge for the win.
 
I'm sure he would have challenged for the win but Vettel was able to pull out a decent gap while Alonso was coming through from 9th. A bit much to make up.
 
A whole month to wait for what was in the end a boring race. DRS overtakes way to easy. Vettel winning by 17 seconds says it all.

Really bad feeling for the rest of the season. The Bulls look like they have found a second over the summer 'holiday'. Not good. Not good at all.
 
The win by 17sec's is misleading. Once Alonso knew he would be unable to fight for the win he eased off. These engines have to last for multiple GP's remember.
 
If one driver has an exceptional drive that stops a race from being described as dire I would have thought.

No it doesn't. If the leading guy races off into the distance then that is not exciting. An exciting race is where you have two or three guys fighting at the front for the win, plus others fighting for points positions.

Hamilton has got the maximum from his car

Considering the amount of paper he makes I'd expect nothing less.

Alonso from 9th on the grid to second is without a doubt exceptional.

As a two-time world champion driving a Ferrari the very least he should be getting is a podium from that grid position.
 
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Vettel was hardly going full whack either Kewee, I'm sure he had more speed in the car if Alonso posed any serious threat to him
 
He pulled out a mega fastest lap on fairly old tyres!

Okay on the plus side, the lead was taken without the use of DRS and there are three different teams on the podium.
 
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