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

Catch it while you can folks otherwise you could be watching the last but one Italian GP from the Monza circuit. Bernie will be sitting down with the GP organisors after the race to discuss a new contract post 2016 and at the moment has said he is not sure if there will be a race here in 2017. The track itself openend in 1922 and since 1950 has held every single Italian GP with the exception of 1980 when it was held at Imola. Since it's a track with so little F1 history behind it, it's no wonder it's in danger of not being around much longer. (sarcasm !!). Bernie has stated he is not going to offer the track a cut price deal and expects it to pay the going rate to host a race.

The layout of the track is of course most famous for it's banked circuit which, despite it being hugely dangerous, would make for an interesting race if it was brought back into use. Since that is extremely unlikely we'll content oursevles with a layout that has remained virtually the same with the exception of a few chicane based tweeks here and there, since the mid 60's.

Known as a breaker of gearboxes and with the engines required to run at full throttle over about 80 percent of the lap, a reliable and powerful engine is an absolute requirement here. So, with a Mercedes one-two the only likely result the big question will be who else will round out the podium?

You would imagine that, for the reasons stated above, it would have to be one of the other Mercedes powered cars. Williams, Force India and Lotus had mixed fortunes in Spa but will all be eyeing that third step. Of course, with Ferrari at their home race and the Italian 'Tifosi' out in full voice there will be an added urge to compete but is that Ferrari engine powerful enough at this track?

McLaren have become the new Caterham in terms of promised upgrades not doing what they are claimed to do. In an Autosport piece in the run up to Spa we were cheerfully informed that the Honda upgrades would put them on a par in terms of power with Ferrari. Sadly it would seem they meant the 2014 powered Manor Ferrari and not the current Ferrari GP car.

With the remaining Reanult and Ferrari powered teams almost certainly fighting it out for the lower end of the top 10 it's really hard to see where the entertainment is going to come from. Let's just hope there is some.
 
Ferrari - are they familiar with said spirit?

Purposely slowing a competitor's car as a racing tactic is hardly new, it has been used several times. At Monza one year (2006?) Frentzen ignored blue flags for over a lap before letting Montoya past when Montoya was closing in on Schumacher, this resulted in Montoya losing enough time to ensure that he was no longer in with a chance of victory.

A similar tactic is for a driver to let another through instead of defending his position; just think Red Bull and Toro Rosso.
 
It depends what one means by "spirit of the sport" because traditionally driving within oneself to help a team-mate is something that has not only always been part of the sport, but an accepted part at that, and there have countless examples of it throughout the sport's history, so it would be totally inappropriate to single out Ferrari on that one.

One of the best examples that spring to mind is the 1991 Japan GP when Senna and Berger drove the optimum example of efficient team work. Mansell had to win that race to retain any chance of beating Senna for the title but the McLaren drivers had the front-row to themselves. So McLaren's tactics were that whoever was in second would deliberately drive slowly through the corners, allowing the lead driver to build up a large gap that would then be too much for Nigel to claw back, and it worked perfectly.

At the start Berger and Senna got away well and drove alongside each other to close down any gap, ensuring Mansell could not overtake at the start. Berger took the lead while Senna did just enough to stay in front of Mansell. Berger quickly built up a big lead while Nigel saw his title chances dwindle away as he remained stuck behind Senna. Eventually Nigel's patience ran out and he span himself out of contention so Senna now guaranteed of the title then started lapping at his true pace and began catching Berger.

McLaren received a lot of plaudits at the time for their superb team work. So from that pint of view this sort of tactics was always an accepted part of the sport, so maybe it's not the spirit of the sport that's changed but rather fans' perception of it.
 
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