raymondu999 wrote:Come on now. Let's not jump to quick conclusions. In the heat of the moment your thinking might not be 100% clear. And if they wait too long, they might pay the price. They have to think quick when it's hot, and to bide their time when things aren't. Imagine if you're in Ferrari's place. And you were faced by the possibility that the tyres might have worn down to the canvas like on Lewis in China 07.
Well that conclusion might not be as quick as you think. I think it's been discussed quite some time and it was admitted even by the team that they were too focused on Webber that they lost track of other things that could happen, which did happen. It wasn't a sudden-safety-car-pit-or-not kind of situation.
And it shouldn't be a hot decision anyway. A professional team in a high risk volatile business should always go into battle with loads of alternative plans. Decision makers should not be relying on judgement alone, but should be backed up by pre-run simulations, estimates, historical data and reactive plans built upon this information. Tires degrading at funny times at a funny rate is a tough situation, yes, but it should not have caught Ferrari by such a surprise. If they had so much money and research done into perfecting their driving simulators, why then can't they have a software generate hundreds of meaningful race scenarios to aid the on-the-spot-in-the-heat decision making process?
It's just not professional that they missed the possibility of Vettel staying ahead. Whether that's Chris Dyer's fault, though, is not up to me to decide.