Twist this any way you want but there is ample evidence to question Sebastian Vettel, and how good he really is is important with regards to why Red Bull are having to engineer excuses and race winning situations for him. Not all the time mind you, but often enough.WhiteBlue wrote:....in a thread that isn't about armchair expertise on drivers but about the Red Bull management going-ons.
In the case of Vettel he has triumphed in the face of much adversity of the engineering side and it is understandable that he feels some grim joy when he eventually came through to reap the fair benefits of his undoubtable speed.

On topic I wonder what will happen to Ciaron Pilbeam, the race engineer who not only failed to relay the warning to Webber that he was going to be passed by Vettel but also advised Webber to use his overtaking button to repel the pass from Vettel. He deliberately screwed Horner and Marko in their management and if they have all their marbles in the right place they ought to punish him for the sabotage.

Red Bull had a guaranteed one-two and they've said they don't care in what order, Vettel was under no pressure from Hamilton, the gaps and lap times had remained constant which didn't show anyone being pressurised, Webber was not slower and Vettel was not faster apart from three mystery laps and the fuel saving explanation doesn't stand up to any kind of scrutiny because of that.