MONDAY MORNING DEBRIEF: Who nailed their strategy in Japan as a hot track saw the top 10 opt for differing tyre calls?


Although the Japanese Grand Prix gave an outcome which mirrored a very distinct competitive hierarchy among the teams, there was considerable variation during the race in how well each car was going. This was down to a track temperature that was around 40C at the race start, but which decreased by 8C as the race progressed.
This impacted each tyre compound differently and, with a wide variety of chosen compounds on the various cars, there was a definite ebb and flow in competitiveness. The medium C2 tyre and the C1 hard were overwhelmingly the favourite race compounds, as the C3 soft had quite a short range even for the favoured two-stop strategy, such are the demands of the fast long corners and the abrasive surface.
Next Up
Related Articles
Aston Martin struggles ‘weighing on everyone’ says Krack
McLaren reserve driver Fornaroli set for test outing with Haas
‘Operationally we weren’t good enough’ says frustrated Komatsu
‘If he smells blood, he goes’ – Wolff on Hamilton title threat
How the F1 world reacted to Hamilton's first Ferrari win
UnlockedPALMER: Can Hamilton mount a title tilt after his first Ferrari win?
