ringo wrote:Funny enough, i think last years bridge stones would be more fitting for 2011 regs.
The one stopper wouldn't be bad at all with some good all out racing.
The reservation we are seeing with the drivers is unprecedented.
A million and 1 pitstops isn't really strategy either. It just looks that way. In reality it's just changing tyres right before they fall off. More like a reaction than strategy.
I'm afraid only refueling can make a pit stop call have a strategic element.
It's also the only way we can have balls to the wall sprinting with no care for destroying tyres or care for running out of fuel.
It's only then will we see drivers give 100% for the whole race.
I can only agree that maybe just adding DRS to last year's formula would have been good enough. However I cannot agree with your "ideal". We had the same situations several years ago - refuelling, optimal strategy of around 2 stops with 1- and 3-stoppers being gambles. Did people not complain about the lack of proper on-track racing then?
ringo wrote:As it is, a redbull will win every race. And the others can only sit back and watch, as they cannot push hard to go 110% to even challenge the redbull.
Hamilton and Alonso look like the only 2 that can even try to do this, but they are being hampered by the stupid tyre degradation.
Wrong, RedBull were not 1-2 in both races, and Seb had to really put in a good lap at Sepang to come out on pole. If Hamilton could have started in front and controlled the first few laps, who knows how it would've turned out? Then again, the team that builds the car that can extract the most tyre performance almost always came out on top, what's the matter with that?
ringo wrote:This is off topic, but another change that need to be made is the points. I think the winner gets too much points now and is over rewarded.
25 points works with almost equal cars, but when a car is totally dominant, the season will be over by halfway with the points hall it's bringing in.
This is getting ridiculous. When we had 10-6-5-4-3-2-1 the ratio between 1st and 2nd was even greater. The recent change to 25 was an incentive for the 2nd/3rd guy to push that little bit more towards the end, which seems to be something you'd appreciate from what you are saying.
I think you've pointed out some problems here with the tyres behaving too radically compared to previous seasons. I suppose that is a valid point and I'm sure the teams and drivers will reflect that and things will get adjusted and optimized. However it is entirely another thing to jump to our feet 2 races into the season and scream for everything to go backwards.