Grand Prix 2015 Bahrain Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

Barely has the dust settled on the China syndrome and we move a few thousand miles around the globe to the tiny Gulf state of Bahrain. The F1 circus rolls into town like a column of tanks and sets up camp for a few days. The race, the first to take place in the Middle East, has been ran every year since 2004 with one exception, when the Arab Spring went bouncing through. Fortunately for F1 fans the show must go on and so it did. Last year’s race saw victory for Lewis Hamilton and the word on the streets is that the bookies are tipping Hamilton again, to take this year’s race. The country itself is known as quite a tolerant place to Western influence and as a former British colony, doesn’t actually hate Brits which makes a nice change. A place of interest worth visiting if you are ever in Bahrain is the rather nice duty free shop on the end of the Jetty in the commercial port. Good luck getting in there without an ID card but the race merchandise is a lot cheaper than that sold at the track. (Information correct as of 2006).

As the teams trundle into the fourth race of the season we are unlikely to see too many upgrades at this stage. Most of the teams are keeping their powder dry until the show piles into the first European leg later this month.

That said then, the Silver Arrows should be pointing the way home for the rest of the field. Last year we had engine switch gate where the first cracks in the friendship between the two young friends started to appear. Fortunately, this season, their relationship is already in bits so we don’t have to worry too much about that.

Ferrari and Williams are once again set to be the next best but will temperature play a part here and push the Ferrari’s closer to the Mercs? While it shouldn’t be as hot as Malaya it should be warmer than China. Williams must be scratching their heads and wondering why they can’t get on the back end of the Mercs let alone the Ferrari’s. Last season’s comeback for Sir Franks outfit seems to have lost some momentum.

Team Enstone, (like many others I try and say Lot.. Lo... Lotu nope sorry just can’t do it) have found themselves some clean air toward the front of the midfield pack in the hands of Grosjean and his team mate if he’s not being hit or hitting something or someone.

Who would have predicted that the next battle would be between Martin Brundle’s new bestest driver ever and his team mate and the two Sauber cars. With Red Bull also getting right into the midfield mix, this seems to be the only part of tarmac that has a genuine battle for every inch of it. I like the Sauber’s blue and yellow colour scheme and the fact they have huge numbers on the side of the car that make them easy to spot

Last season’s surprise third place came from Force India and there’s no doubt Perez won’t be achieving the same here. The best Force India can hope for is to have a good clean race and get themselves into a position to pick off a point or two.

McLaren, well they are certainly having a testing season. An uncharacteristic mistake from Button saw Maldonado declared the innocent party. That event in itself will be less rare than McLaren scoring a point this season if their current run of form continues. Flashes of speed seem to give a false dawn that some sort of improvement is being made before qualification starts and reality dawns.

And finally to Manor Marussia (this space available for sponsorship contact 1-800-manor). The little team that wouldn’t go. While they still have the re-badged 2014 car and the 2014 engines they have no hope but, to be on the grid is hope enough that their season can continue. I like what Will Stevens is doing in that car. When trouble free he is comfortably ahead of his team mate. He drives a good clean race, stays out of trouble and gets on with it. Merhi is putting the laps in and bringing back the data which is all that can be asked of him.

So, there’s the rundown of the runners and riders. Those lucky three to climb the top step and be interviewed by some random passerby, will get to taste the traditional Middle East sparkling Rose Water in place of the champers. Whoever wins though, it will taste just as sweet.
 
Last edited:
Lewis has probably overused his race starting tyres with his lap in Q2 being over a second faster than anyone else's, but it probably won't make much difference come the end of the day...
 
Maybe a bit of tyre preservation in Q2 knowing they'll be the tyre Nico will start on? Might explain why Kimi/Seb were so far off Lewis's time as well in Q2.
[edit] Meph said the same thing.
 
Nico made a conscious decision, an error of judgement, it may well turn out to be catastrophic for his Championship aspirations. With Sebastian and Ferrari even more threatening, Mercedes are going to have to abandon their obsession with fairness to their two drivers. They will have to start optimising the strategy of the potential race winning driver.

Personally, I think that will be a good thing, however if Ferrari don't step up to the plate everywhere and not just rear-limited circuits, there are going to be a lot of races like china...

I suppose it is possible Nico will start turning the tables on Lewis in qualifying and that may lead to a whole different universe!
 
Last edited:
personally I don't think Nico would have had any chance of beating Lewis anyway given the form the latter is now consistently showing in qualifying.
Some of the past greats like Lauda or Prost were faced with a similar situation but they didn't waste any time kidding themselves or trying to justify to the media qualifying positions inferior to their team-mates. They immediately set about finding other ways of beating them during the forthcoming race.
 
If the upgrade on the Ferrari engine coming by Canada (20 more horsepower appatently) we could be in for a two team duel and I have to agree with snowy that Merc will have to prioritise their leading driver so Rosberg needs to get on terms quick.

If Ferrari do challenge the Mercs and they don't priortise then it could lead to them losing out. We all know Ferrari from past dealings that Ferrari will noy have those issues.
 
It does look like Seb has the measure of Kimi this year. Plus, Raikkonen seems to be happy with the team this season and, if he's quite a way behind Vettel by the halfway point of the season, he may well be more than compliant in supporting a title push (this requires Ferrari being fast enough, of course).

I asked the question of pit strategy last time but China suited Mercedes having 2 stops. However, it looks as though they may have to 3 stop and let the car off the leash to keep Ferrari's long runs (and potentially one less stop) under control. Does anyone else have any inkling as to what might happen on that front today?
 
Both Herbert and Button have been saying that Rosberg should concentrate on what he does on track to beat Hamilton instead of appearing to moan all the time

Have to say I thought this might happen in that Hamilton has the 2nd world title and appears relaxed in the Mercedes team and has lifted his game

Rosberg is probably over complicating things,, he's not going to take the Kimi approach " Shut up and drive " but Jenson Button is the only one who has cracked it how to beat Hamilton ..
 
Looks like a DNS for Jenson, that is a big step back, to win you have to race, to race you have to start. Some vary serious design problems if you rebuild a cars electrics and it doesn't work and you can't fix it in a night
 
Something that kind of went unnoticed was McLaren almost picking up a point today with their two stopper. Big step forward there.
 
Rumour has it that the new Ferrari engine will have 40 more horses in Canada, so it should get closer by then.
Won't make any difference.

Mercedes had both championships sewn up before the season started.

At least that's what I read on here from various people.
 
Back
Top Bottom