03
July
2016
|
19:36
Europe/Amsterdam

2016 Austrian Grand Prix – Race

TWO-STOP STRATEGY RESULTS IN VICTORY FOR LEWIS HAMILTON AFTER AN ACTION-PACKED RACE IN AUSTRIA

LOWER TEMPERATURES LEAD TO LESS TYRE WEAR AND DEGRADATION THAN EXPECTED

TYRE ISSUE FOR SEBASTIAN VETTEL BEING INVESTIGATED

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton won the Austrian Grand Prix from pole position, following a two-stop strategy after an action packed race that culminated in a duel between him and his team mate Nico Rosberg all the way to the final lap. Rosberg initially used the timing of his pit stop tyre strategy to boost his position, ‘undercutting’ a number of drivers including his team mate (who started from pole) to lead the race. But Hamilton reeled him in during a thrilling finale, with Rosberg eventually finishing fourth after they touched on the last lap. Compared to the previous sessions in Austria, ambient and track temperatures were considerably cooler, with 16 and 24 degrees respectively at the start of the race. This had the effect of containing wear and degradation, although the strategy was affected by a safety car that teams used to take a ‘free’ pit stop without significant loss of track position. Ferrari and Red Bull adopted a different strategy to the majority of frontrunners, beginning the race on the supersoft tyre rather than the ultrasoft, which was the default choice for the other top 10 drivers – being just over half a second quicker. However, during a long first stint, Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel experienced a tyre issue. The exact circumstances are still being investigated together with Ferrari; however this appears to be an isolated incident as no other drivers experienced similar problems. After the final pit stops, there was a three-way battle for the lead between the Mercedes drivers and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, who made one less pit stop than Rosberg and Hamilton. Rosberg and Hamilton were separated by less than a second all the way to the chequered flag, making this one of those memorable races of the season. Paul Hembery, Pirelli motorsport director: “With Ferrari we’re fully investigating the incident on Sebastian Vettel’s car, in order to finalize a cause. Tyre strategy proved to be crucial to the Austrian Grand Prix, with a close battle to the finish that went all the way to the final lap, using a number of different strategies. The teams headed into the weekend with little information on the tyres following the mixed conditions in free practice and qualifying, as a result of which strategy was a question of thinking on their feet and extracting the maximum advantage from the changing race circumstances.” Fastest times of the day by compound

 SoftSupersoftUltrasoft
FirstHamilton 1m08.411sRosberg 1m08.491sRicciardo          1m08.770s
SecondRaikkonen1m08.876sMassa  1m09.899sHulkenberg       1m10.309s
ThirdRosberg 1m08.955sBottas  1m10.210sHamilton           1m11.180s

Longest stint of the race:

SoftRaikkonen42 laps
SoftGrosjean42
SoftButton42
SoftVerstappen42
SoftSainz J42
SoftWehrlein42
SupersoftNasr27
UltrasoftHamilton21

Truthometer: We predicted a winning strategy of two stops, following an ultrasoft-soft-soft pattern. However, the safety car following Vettel’s incident affected this pattern, together with much cooler track temperatures than had been the case previously. Hamilton stopped 2 times in the end, on laps 21 and 54. For more information: please visit our all-new website, which is regularly updated with exclusive in-depth features, news and reviews. To find out more, please visit: www.pirelli.com/global/en-ww/austria-2016-race