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

The first race of the season has just finished and what a race it was. Exciting from start to finish. Nice battles. Three World Champions on the podium. And the good thing is, there is another Grand Prix in just seven days time in Malaysia!

Having won in Melbourne, Kimi Räikkönen will go into the 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix leading the World Driver's Championship. His Lotus car looked as though it was treating the new Pirelli tyres better than any other car/driver-combination, managing to win the race with only two stops. Can they keep this good initial form up?

Red Bulls pace didn't look too frightening in Melbourne. Mark Webbers race was ruined by his (usual) bad start, which apparently was caused by a software issue. Sebastian Vettel finished third. Let's see if they'll be able to fight for the win in Malaysia, where temperatures should be significantly higher than in Australia.

McLaren had a poor race (as expected). Jenson Button just finishing within the points. Sergio Perez' terrible qualifying led to him finishing just outside the points. Jenson sounded pretty pessimistic after the race about short term improvements. So we shouldn't expect a strong performance from them in Malaysia. But one never knows.

Mercedes had a pretty good start to the 2013 F1 season. Even though Nico Rosberg retired in the middle of the race, Lewis Hamilton was able to qualify third and finish fifth, which in his own words was more than expected. He seemed very upbeat about the car's performance, so there is probably more to b e expected from them. Considering McLaren's early form, his switch to Mercedes seems to have worked out.

Ferrari had a very strong race, leading the constructor's championship after Fernando Alonso finished second and Felipe Massa finished fourth. Alonso was strong as usual, but it was Felipe Massa who looked really impressive. After outqualifying his teammate, he was able to keep Alonso behind him for the first part of the race only losing the battle against Alonso due to a poor pit stop strategy. They're in for a pretty strong season.

In the midfield battle it was Force India who looked mightily impressive with Adrain Sutil leading the race twice and finishing seventh after his last stint was compromised by the quickly deterioating super soft tyres. Let's see if they can keep up their good form in Malaysia.
Sauber only started the race with one car as Nico Hülkenberg was unable to start due to a fuel pump problem. Esteban Gutierrez looked rather anonymous during the race. They'll be hoping for a more competetive outing in the next race.
Williams didn't look too strong with Pastor Maldonado calling the car "undriveable" and retiring after beaching his car in turn one. Rookie Valtteri Bottas finished 14th not living up to the high expectations people put on him. Let's see, if they will be able to make short term improvements for the Malaysian Grand Prix.
Toro Rosso looked strong during Free Practice and parts of qualifying but only managed to finish 9th with Jean Eric Vergne. Daniel Riccardo, who told media before the race that he will have to "blow Vergne away" in order to get a shot at the Red Bull seat for 2014, retired from the race.

In the battle of the "new teams" it was Marussia who looked to have the upper hand over Caterham, with Jules Bianchi appearing to be strongest of the four backmarkers.

Can Kimi Räikkönen make it two out of two? Are McLaren going to be as poor as in Malaysia? Will Nico Rosberg come back strongly after his retirement? And most imprortantly: What about the weather?

Discuss!
 
Find it puzzling in a way that Perez didn't get a penalty for blocking Hulkenberg? Not that I want Perez punished been a Mclaren fan an all. However, this does seem one rule for one and not the other and for me Kimi can deem himself very unlucky to get this penalty :ok:.
 
I've never agreed with this whole blocking rule as these events tend to happen very quickly and the majority of so called blocking are not done on purpose. In most cases the offending driver has very little time to react or simply has no where to go, especially in corners. It looked like Kimi and Webber were jockeying for position and suddenly Rosberg appeared behind. We know the mirrors on these cars are pointless and I'd be surprised if he was warned by radio that there was a car on a hot lap behind. Blocking is Schumi parking his car across the track to prevent another driver setting a faster time not this non event.
 
All part of the challenge of being a professional racing driver & sportsman. You have to learn to not unfairly disadvantage others, and whether accidental or not, you can't break the rules - think of some handball incidents in football; yes it may happen quickly but it's still against the rules of the sport.
 
They have a team of people on the other end of a radio looking at competitor's track position and lap and sector times, too. It's not just a penalty for Kimi but for the team. He is not necessarily 100% responsible individually but as a team they are certainly responsible. Wrong place, wrong time, but collectively he and his team should have known where he was and what time it was. Silly error and avoidable.
 
Find it puzzling in a way that Perez didn't get a penalty for blocking Hulkenberg? Not that I want Perez punished been a Mclaren fan an all. However, this does seem one rule for one and not the other and for me Kimi can deem himself very unlucky to get this penalty :ok:.

Lack of consistency is the order of the day as far as rent a steward goes.
 
Quintessentially Not to stray off-topic too much, but a football still comes to you bloody quickly, even it is just handball, and not ball to hand.

Well yes that is why the rules do not punish ball to hand, especially when the ball flies at you at speed and you have no time to react. As long as you don't make hand movements towards the ball you should be ok. F1 could adopt this same common sense approach.

The blocking rule in it's current state is open to interpretation. This is why there is so much inconsistency in it's application.Sometimes the driver has very little time to react and any wrong movement could make things worse and cause a collision. I guess this is why Perez stayed on the racing line when Hulkenburg came up behind him.
 
Which is why I state that it is up to the team to give the driver ample warning. If they have failed to do that then that is their mistake and tough titties.

[EDIT] Sorry. I missed the Perez/Hulk incident.
 
I really do hope Massa wins this Grand Prix.

In Australia he had a great start off the dirty side of the track, he could do it again, but Alonso's on the clean side, and with a big run down into Turn 1, I can easily see both Ferrari's winning.

The only way I can see Massa winning, is if he jumps Vettel at the start, and Alonso getting held up by Vettel, or if Alonso retires.
 
Both Ferrari's jumped off the line faster than the rest in Melbourne. Was that just both drivers doing well or does the car have good traction from 0mph?

Oh how I would love to see Massa jump ahead into turn 1 and start opening a gap.

I don't know about Alonso.

But Massa always tends to have great starts, I particularly noticed this in 2008, but in 2009 it was even more noticeable, and he's been great at starts ever since.
 
Ferrari also have the added advantage that Alonso and Massa are light fellas and using the KER's off the line is a greater advantage to them compared to heavier drivers. That's why I think Webber gets bogged down a lot on the start line :ok:.
 
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Will we see this again tomorrow?
 
I don't know about Alonso.

But Massa always tends to have great starts, I particularly noticed this in 2008, but in 2009 it was even more noticeable, and he's been great at starts ever since.
Alonso has great starts. The start is about far more than the first 400 metres. Alonso's starts normally take him through the first 3 or 4 corners. Check out how many places he makes up before the end of the first lap. That's the best measure of a drivers starts.
 
I'm excited for this race simply because of Ferrari starting 2 and 3. Hopefully they can put some pressure on Vettel going into the first turn and prevent this from being another drive away victory.
 
I don't think Vettel will have any drive away victories this year. He'll get wins for sure I would think, but he'll have to work much harder for them this year.
 
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