To the
uninformed viewer, there was constant action up and down the field in both
races. But, therein lies my biggest gripe – there was a lot of action, but not
much of it actual racing.
At China,
two principal elements served to ruin the spectacle – an option tyre that was
only good for qualifying, and two DRS zones that reduced the art of overtaking
to mere child’s play. It wasn’t so much a race at Shanghai as a scientific
experiment in which the various tyre strategies of the 22-strong field simply
played themselves out.
Thanks to
DRS, there was no danger of Fernando Alonso getting stuck behind a slower car
as the varying strategies overlapped, making the Spaniard’s victory virtually
inevitable because of the Ferrari’s relative kindness on its tyres.
There’s
nothing wrong with tyre management being an element of success in F1, and
Ferrari, as well as Lotus, ought to reap the rewards for designing cars that
can look after their rubber better than the opposition. But, imagine how much
more thrilling the race would have been if Alonso had needed to overtake Lewis Hamilton,
Sebastian Vettel and Jenson Button without the help of DRS.
Were that
the case, despite Ferrari having the best package, Alonso would have needed to
work hard to capitalise on his tyre ‘kindness’ advantage. Had he got stuck
behind another car, it would have given his rivals a chance to close in. He
would have been forced to dive up the inside at turn 6 or turn 14 and hope for
the best, just like in the good old days.
What’s
worse, with DRS, in many cases the car ahead wasn’t even attempting to defend, knowing that they
weren’t competing with the car behind. Once Vettel pitted for the final time at
China to equip his mandatory option tyres with five laps to go, race engineer
Guillaume Rocquelin told the reigning champion he could now race, as if to say
that, up to that point, he had not been racing.
Isn’t
racing what these drivers are paid millions of dollars to do, though? What we
saw at China may have looked like racing, but the vast majority of the
overtaking was a simple case of strategies overlapping, with the car on fresher
rubber much faster, and not drivers on the limit fighting tooth and nail for
every place.
Bahrain was
less of an extreme as far as the tyres were concerned, but, on a track where
overtaking is already eminently possible, DRS resulted in a race that was
virtually impossible to follow.
The problem
was that, having just been passed, a slower car merely had to remain within a
second of the car ahead for the following lap in order to be more or less
assured of regaining the place along the start/finish straight.
Whilst this
generated plenty of action, much of it had an aura of meaninglessness about it,
much like the non-stop overtaking seen in series such as NASCAR. That isn’t to
say that there wasn’t 'real' overtaking to be found at Bahrain, but that just made
the effects of DRS all the more maddening.
Turns 4, 6
and 8 all saw considerable action throughout the race, whilst the first couple of
laps proved – before DRS was activated – that it was more than possible to
overtake at the first corner without the need for artificial overtaking aids.
Alonso’s comeback through the field after losing his DRS underlined that even
further.
I recently
watched the 2006 Bahrain Grand Prix as part of Sky F1’s ‘Classic F1’
programming, and it was a cracker of a race despite the refuelling, relatively
durable tyres and lack of overtaking aids that proponents of the Pirelli/DRS formula
seem to abhor. It was a straight fight between Alonso and Michael Schumacher,
and the result was in doubt until several laps from the chequered flag.
Both men
were on the limit throughout, knowing that their tyres would allow them to be. And, at
an overtaking-friendly track such as Bahrain, plenty of passes were made up and
down the field in a manner which the likes of Juan Manuel Fangio, Jim Clark and
Ayrton Senna would all instinctively recognise.
If Senna
was still around today, I’m sure he would lament the demise of ‘real’
overtaking and the increasing trend of faster drivers to simply wait until the
next DRS zone to make their move. I would rather see ten perfectly judged,
edge-of-your-seat ‘pure’ passes in a race, like the ones in Bahrain ’06, than fifty
made with the help of DRS.
If it was
up to me, I would ban DRS in a heartbeat. When it comes down to it, it’s an
artificial solution to the core problem of cars being unable to follow each
other closely enough to overtake.
A far
better solution would be to adjust the technical regulations with the intent of
dramatically reducing the aerodynamic efficiency of F1 cars. This could be achieved
through a narrower front wing, perhaps with a mandatory single plane, or a spec
diffuser. Perhaps a ban on carbon brakes would also help to facilitate
overtaking by extending the length of braking zones.
That said,
I would settle for a compromise whereby the number of uses of DRS was
restricted, say, to ten or fifteen times in a race – much like IndyCar’s ‘push
to pass’ system – and was also available as a defensive measure for the car
ahead. That would certainly eliminate the ‘inevitability’ factor of overtaking
in a DRS zone and make the device far more tactical.
Moving onto
tyres, in an ideal world, I’d love nothing more than a return to a full-blown
tyre war. Just like DRS, the idea of Pirelli creating a tyre deliberately designed
to degrade over a race distance is another ‘sticking plaster’ solution to
induce overtaking that would be rendered unnecessary if the powers that be took the
issue of reducing aerodynamic reliance more seriously.
A tyre war
would be beneficial to F1 for the same reason there would be uproar if we had
identical chassis. Variety makes things interesting as different packages perform,
er, differently on different circuits, in different conditions, and in
different circumstances. There’s no reason why that logic shouldn’t apply to
tyres as well – more variables means more unpredictability.
The effects
on pit-stop strategy would be difficult to gauge, as the last time we had a
tyre war without refuelling was way back in 1991. But, as long as numerous
compounds were available, we’d theoretically see a variety of strategies in
play ranging from perhaps no stops at all to two or three, depending on the
circuit and other factors.
Sadly, the
economic climate means it’s unlikely that tyre companies would be willing to
plough the immense resources into the development and testing that a bona fide tyre
war would require. But, even if we resign ourselves to the reality of a single
tyre supplier for now, there are still some tweaks we could make to the regulations
to reconcile Pirelli rubber with ‘real’ racing.
First, the
rules need to be adjusted as to ensure that, on Saturdays, none of the Q3
runners opt to not set a competitive lap time in order to save tyres. The
obvious solution to this, besides perhaps some kind of penalty for not doing
so, would be to award each of the top ten qualifiers a fresh set of option
tyres solely for the purpose of qualifying.
This would
mean in turn that the Q3 drivers could then start on whichever tyres they saw
fit, giving them a wider range of strategic choices rather than having to start
on worn option tyres. So too would abolishing the rule that requires drivers to
use both compounds in a race, as this prevents drivers plummeting down the
order late in a race by being forced to use less-than-optimal rubber.
Undoubtedly, there's a balance to be struck between the sport and the 'show'. After all, the former can't occur without the millions of dollars that are generated by television deals and sponsorship. Nobody wants a return to the kind of racing we saw in the early 2000s, and admittedly the current rule-set does guard against processional racing at the very least.
However, degrading tyres and DRS in the majority of cases merely give the illusion of real racing, which, it could be argued, may be even worse than what we had before. The danger is that 'hardcore' fans become disillusioned and switch their attentions to other forms of motorsport, leaving only the notoriously fickle 'casual' fanbase which is liable to desert F1 in favour of other sports at any time.
There is no reason why F1 cannot appeal to the hardcore and casual fan alike, and the key to this is close, exciting, but most importantly real racing. That means a return to somewhat more durable tyres and the scrapping of DRS. And for that to work without leading to a dearth of on-track action, the FIA need to get tough on aerodynamics once and for all.
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