I never said it was Kimi. I said that if Ferrari/Kimi hadn't cocked up the tyre/fuel strategy then Kimi would have been closer to Lewis than 66 seconds, if not ahead.
you are such a kimi fanboy . Even describing his crash into Sutil as a demonstration of superb car control. Kimi wasn't anywhere near Lewis. He span once, and had a big off as well as not matching his wet pace. At best he wopuld have been within 20 seconds... AT BEST if he drove a perfect race. The error with tyres did NOT cost him a lap of time.
Intrepid, I support Hamilton, but you're ****ing retarded. Claiming that Tristan is "kimi fanboi" becuase he says it would have been a different race if Ferrari wasn't ****ing retarded in brain is a perfectly valid and true fact.
Alonso was the other one who left the inters on and he fell back dramatically as well when the rain tipped it down. In the first stint Kimi came back at Hamilton and was within striking distance.
How do you know where Kimi would have been given half a chance on a set of inters with some tread left?
but he didnt have inters with tread so thats the end of it to me, all this ifs and buts, stop spectulating on what could have happened, motosport isnt just about the driver its the team as well ,more so in f1, and the team ****ed up
Nearly edited my signature with "Proud member of..." but thought better of it.
To be fair though, Kimi had to come back at Hamilton when the track was drying, because Hamilton had pulled away in the wet. In the first stops Hamilton took on more fuel, and it started raining again, so it's not difficult to imagine that even if Kimi had fresh boots on, Hamilton would've just pulled away in those conditions like he did at the start, and would've stayed ahead at the second stop because he would've run a lap or two longer.
Anyway all this is moot. We could just as easily be arguing "what if" about Japan last year when McLaren didn't bring Hamilton in for tyres when they should've. He would've won the championship there but he didn't because of the team's iffy strategy, but nobody called Kimi lucky for winning it in Brazil.
It is often said when someone is on the defensive, and knowingly talking rubbish they resort to personal attacks. I think we can confidently say this applies hear.
The true FACT was in WET conditions Kimi was no where near Hamilton. the fact that for 95% of the race was in wet full wet conditions mean Kimi had no chance of getting anywhere near Hamilton, even on the right strategy.
Kimi spun remember... I don't recall his team making the decision
"Kimi can u please turn you car backwards and nearly bin it into the barriers costing you all the points"
Kimi on his day can be ahead of everyone by miles... yesterday he was given a wet masterclass by Hamilton... thats an actual FACT
It's not like I'm going to upset any of our Chinese or Japanese racers by mixing them up. I mean, we don't get upset if people mistake us for the French, do we?
So you agree? And they did cost him a lap of time - he lost about 40 seconds on the track, and about 20 seconds making a second pitstop. This equates to 60 seconds, which is what he lost in that period alone. Then factor in traffic, a spin (Lewis went off too remember), and you see that Kimi would have been within 20 seconds of Lewis by the end, and quite possibly closer.
Being a short, illiterate fool does mean you get a lot of personal attacks, making you ideal at recognising this situation
Using capitals as frequently as you do makes you look silly. You don't know any facts, they are opinions. And the whole race was wet, so needless capitalisation. However, you'll find that the difference in lap times wasn't that far off. And remember - I've not said that it wasn't a good drive by Lewis, or that Kimi could have stolen the win. I'm just stating that Lewis' margin of victory wasn't as big as the final result suggested.
Aha, resorting to silliness in an effort to divert attention. Lewis went off too - was that McLaren's decision?
You seem to think that each race, taken on it's own, proves Hamilton is exceptional. Yet nearly all his results this year suggest he isn't. The difference is, of course, I don't claim that Kimi, Heikki, Jenson, Fernando etc are exceptional, and neither am I a blind fanboy.
And having people agree with me doesn't make them Tristan fanboys. It makes them people not agreeing with you. Most of them actually.
All in all, the only thing I lament from this race was once again the lost opportunity for some good real racing action. Instead we once more got a good depiction of how inexperienced most of the grid is.
Except from 2 or 3 interesting passes (most notably Heidfeld's 2 and perhaps Raikkonen's over Alonso [mostly for Alonso's control of the slide after he was passed]) the deciding factor of the race was chance really (what with aquaplaning cars and people going off - some got lucky and avoided sandtraps, others didn't), and luckily for everyone there were only close-calls for collisions (some too close - like Bourdais[?] and Sutil or Webber's scary first lap peek-a-boo).
I was there. Was such a good race.been twice now. Went for the Practice, Quali and race day for 2 years running. Sad to see its moving to donnington in 2010. Pitty they moved the BMW Pit Stop Lane (Where you can interact with different things. Drive with lfs, change tyres on cars etC.) As i got there someone told me it had gone to the Trafford Centre for the weekend. Which is right near me.
O well, Bring on donnington, hope to go to the last race at silverstone next year
(PS. I shook hamiltons hand, and saw Barichello and Button face to face. Was well chuft )