21
September
2014
|
18:28
Europe/Amsterdam

2014 Singapore Grand Prix – Race

MIXTURE OF TYRE STRATEGIES AT LONGEST GRAND PRIX OF THE YEAR

HAMILTON WINS FROM POLE TO CLAIM CHAMPIONSHIP LEAD: 100% SAFETY CAR RECORD MAINTAINED, WITH EFFECT ON TYRE STRATEGY

RED BULL USES TWO-STOPS TO PLACE BOTH CARS ON THE PODIUM

Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton made the most of a three-stop strategy to win Singapore and claim the lead of the world championship. He did three opening stints on the P Zero Red supersoft before completing the race, which ran to the two-hour time limit rather than the scheduled 61 laps, on the P Zero Yellow soft. However, he was closely challenged by Red Bull’s reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel, who ran a two-stop strategy from fourth on the grid. Vettel did two opening stints on the supersoft and then a final stint on the soft at the end of the grand prix, when the car was at its lightest on low fuel. His team-mate Daniel Ricciardo followed the same strategy to finish third in front of the Ferrari of Fernando Alonso. This allowed Vettel to claim the lead in the closing stages of the race, illustrating perfectly how tyre strategy can make a crucial difference. With a time gap of around two seconds between the compounds, all the drivers started on the faster supersoft. How they used the tyres after that proved crucial, providing the key to the strategy. Singapore kept up its 100% safety car record following contact between two competitors halfway through the race. Alonso and McLaren driver Jenson Button took the opportunity of the seven-lap safety car period to pit for soft tyres. Both Red Bull and Williams drivers had already pitted for soft tyres before the safety car, meaning that their options were open after running both compounds in the first half of the race. After the safety car came in, Hamilton needed to extend his lead to around 25 seconds: the time needed to get in and out of the pits. But the Mercedes driver re-emerged in second place after his final stop on lap 52, and used his pace advantage to take the lead back from Vettel shortly afterwards. Paul Hembery said: “Again we saw another very tense and exciting race where different tyre strategies formed a crucial part of the outcome. In the closing stages of the grand prix we had Hamilton on newer soft tyres behind Vettel on older soft tyres, meaning he had to overtake to seal the race victory. Before then, we had the situation where Hamilton, on the faster supersoft tyre, had to build up a crucial half-minute or so gap after the safety car to give him enough time to get in and out of the pits and change to the soft tyre. So, as we have seen before, despite the fact that there were different strategies at work, it was an extremely close finish.” Fastest times of the day by compound:

  Supersoft Soft Intermediate Wet
First Ham 1m50.417s Kvy 1m51.761s N/A N/A
Second Mag 1m51.639s Ros 1m51.937s N/A N/A
Third Per 1m52.007s Mas 1m52.515s N/A N/A

Longest stint of the race:

Soft Massa (38 laps)
Supersoft Hamilton (26 laps)

Truth-O-Meter: We predicted three stops for the race: start on the supersoft, change to supersoft again on lap 20, supersoft again on lap 36 and then finish the race on the soft from lap 51. Lewis Hamilton followed the sequence we expected but stopped on lap 15, lap 28, and lap 52. However, this was affected by the safety car, which made a big difference to the pit stop timing.