Grand Prix 2014 Hungarian Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

For the 28th time in a row we come to the Hungaroring for the Hungarian Grand Prix. That actually makes this the 3rd longest serving track on the calendar with Spa taking a break for 2003 and Silverstone not having the British Grand Prix in 1986. So rightfully should be given the ‘classic’ status as an event. It isn’t a phrase used very often for the track though as it greatly divides opinion amongst fans due to the difficult nature if passing on the track. Its often described as Monaco without the walls and whilst to some that is a negative tag for me, as I love Monaco, it’s a compliment. The twisty nature of the dust bowl that is Hungry is a great leveller for car performance or for at least mixing up the running order as due to the place barely having a straight the teams can’t just rely on horsepower to blast their way through. One of the reasons I personally love the track is because a driver who dials himself into the track can really make a difference. If a driver picks their lines spot on and finds the best spots on the tarmac for grip they can arguably get more of a gain at this track than on any other track all season.

Personally I fell in love with the Hungaroring after watching the tense battle of the Boutsen train in 1990. For me that was F1 at its finest as the best in the business at the time put each other under pressure and tried as hard as they can to find a way to the front. Boutsen held on with the defensive drive of his life but Senna came above the rest to take the 2nd spot although he and Berger both got away with basically punting Naninni and Mansell out of the race in moves now that would have the stewards jumping over themselves to slap on massive penalty’s. Speaking of penalty’s it would be amiss of me not to mention what, for me, was the overtake of the season by Grosjean last year that was ‘disallowed’ due to a dubious judgement of track limits.

Overtaking is difficult here but whilst it is not in abundance it is always of high quality as a driver really has to work hard to make it stick. The hard nature of the overtaking does not mean we always have lights to flag victories. This would not be a Hungarian GP review without a mention of Mansell’s win from 12th in 1989. The racing here is never without passion, which leads me to pointing towards Damon Hill’s awesome drive in the Arrows in 97. Its also in recent times been known for first time winners with Alonso, Button and Kovalinen taking debut wins here.

This season the Hungaroring should shake things up a bit by again the Merc advantage with that not able to use that horsepower. We do seem to say that every week now though. If you look at Lewis Hamilton’s form around this track I can’t see it mattering too much and, whilst Rosberg has never had great results round here, Its similarity to Monaco and his form there suggests he won’t be any slouch either. The Red Bull chassie should really come in to play round here and should shuffle them forward meaning Danny Ricciardo might be buzzing around them silver arrows and with Vettel creeping ever closer to him he should be around too. The Williams is continuing to look good with Bottas really seeming to have found another gear and with this being the nearest he has to a home race he could be a factor. I don’t think we should rule out the Mclaren’s too as Jenson Button is another expert around here and KMag comes to one of the few tracks he knows and race around last season. The car seems to be getting better and any sign of a weather mix up and they’ll most likely have to be factored in by the pair at the front.

This race is the last race of the first act of F1 2014 and you have to say its been a good one. We all know that the summer break can change a lot but whatever that may bring everyone will be hoping for a great result at this one. The break is a long time to rue any errors, and in the case of the Merc drivers, it’s a long time to be sitting doing maths in your head at what you need to do to pull a points gap back.

So come on guys hit me with a few predictions as well as thoughts on the Hungaroring.
 
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Christian Horner is not one of my favorite people, but that was very well put. I liked how he put it back on the media who tend to act like they do not wrong as they are only "covering the sport." However, they promote the spectacle just as much, if not more than, the sport itself. You are going to hear more about F1 going to "undesirable" locations from the media than from the sport itself. A casual onlooker may not even notice that F1 is in a politically unstable location if they just follow the broadcast. It's a sport, not a soap box.
 
Magnussen starts in the pit lane due to needing a new chassis.
one less problem car for Hamilton to deal with

that could have been Rosberg who went wide but managed to save it - i dont know what Nico has done to deserve so much good fortune
 
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I didn't see Kmag go wide all I saw was him going straight on and surely it isn't good luck Nico is having, finishing races is what drivers are paid to do and it is what he cars are designed to do so that isn't luck. I would say that Lewis is having bad luck rather than NIco is having good luck.

Of course there are always the conspiracy theories to fall back on.

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If you were talking about it was good fortune that Nico didn't hit the barriers I disagree there were three drivers who got to turn one first two of them experienced vet's and one rookie, the rookie ended up in the barrier due to lack of experience in my view nothing to do with luck on the other two drivers part...
 
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Why is it that it never seems to occur to anyone that Hamilton just may be a bit harder on the equipment than Rosberg is?
 
It was a high pressure fuel hose which split.

I'm not sure how a driver drives the car could affect that.

In Australia it was a tiny split in a rubber tube connected to a spark plug.
 
The GP2 & GP3 races since qualifying have shown that overtaking is possible if the driver is aggressive enough. With the extra speed Hamilton will have I can see him getting a long way up the field, his 1st challenge is making sure he beats Magunssen to the end of the pitlane.
 
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