F1: Japanese Grand Prix: The Debrief - Match point Mercedes, Ferrari failures and Honda's shame

Match point for Hamilton and Mercedes

Six weeks ago prior to the Italian Grand Prix, Sebastian Vettel sat seven points clear at the top of the F1 drivers’ championship, having led since the season-opener at Melbourneಞ. While Mercedes was on the rise, the fight for the crown was widely expected to go right down to the wire in Abu Dhabi.

Just four races later, everything has changed. A paltry return of 27 points has seen Vet🦹tel drop 59 points back, giving Hamilton the chance to wrap up the title at the United States Grand Prix in Austin, T✱exas on October 22.

Japanese GP: The Debrief - Match point Mercedes, Ferrari's failures

Match point for Hamilton and Mercedes

Six weeks ago prior to the Italian Grand Prix, Sebastian Vettel🌌 sat seven points clear at the top of the F1 drivers’ championship, having led since the season-opener at Melbourne. While Mercedes was on the rise, the 💞fight for the crown was widely expected to go right down to the wire in Abu Dhabi.

Just four races later, everything has changed. A paltry return of 27 points has seen Vettel drop 59 points back, giving Hamilton the chance to wrap up the title at the United Staꦬtes Grand Prix in Austin, Texas on October 22.

Hamilton has been in excelle🎉nt form, yet Ferrari has arguably been quicker than Mercedes, especially in Singapore and Malaysia. Vettel should, at worst, be just a handful of points back from Hamilton with four races to go, with the grandstand finish in Abu Dhabi still on the cards.

Alas, Ferrari’s reliability woes have 🍸scuppered his hopes. The retirement at Suzuka was the writing on the wall for Vettel’s bid for a fifth championship - and, more poignantly, what would have been his most significant championship as his first with Ferrari.

Ferrari president Sergio Marchionne made his frustration clear following the engine issues in Malaysia; one can only wond🍨er how m🌱uch worse the fall-out from the man at the top will be this time around.

To ♌win the title in Austin, Hamilton needs to outscore Vettel by 16 points. If he wins and Vettel is lower than fifth, it’s job done.🅺 Otherwise, sealing the title in Mexico would be even more of a formality.

The constructors’ championship has been over for some time in reality, but Mercedes should clinch its fourth straight team🌃s’ title in Austin. Ferrari has to outsco🔴re the Silver Arrows by 17 points to keep it alive to Mexico, meaning two cars in the top four will be enough for Mercedes at COTA.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, Mobot
Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, Mobot
© PHOTO 4

The post-mortem begins at Ferrari

The Asian flyaways have been brutal for Ferrari. If the Tifosi thought Singapore was the lowest ebb the team would reacꦑh, they were sadly mistaken.

Fe๊rrari’s inquest into how it lost both championships will begin in earnest. After being so strong in pre-season and having🧜 the early edge on Mercedes, Ferrari looked to have its first real shot at a title since 2012 - and even then it was the massive outsider largely reliant on Fernando Alonso dragging it forward.

This was Ferrari’s best car since 2008 - almost a decade - and yet the teཧam has capitulated in ignominious fashion to squander both title.

Luck always come into racing, and Ferrari has certainly faced setbacks. The crash at the start in Singapore could have been preve𒁃nted, sure, but Vettel did what he thought was best with all the information he had, moving across to defend from Max Verstappen and not𒈔 knowing where Kimi Raikkonen was.

But the double failure in Malaysia was unacceptable. It was a race Mercedes was expected to dominate, yet Ferrari had the edge - and with Red Bull being so quick, there was a big chance for Vettel to really claw back into Hamilton’s lead. Instead, more g𝓀round was lost, and after Raikkonen’s demise, the team was totally powerless to prevent the gap from growing.

The spark plug failure at Suzuka is a tough one, given it is supplied by Ferrari by an outside company (NGK, wh📖o, ironically, are based arou💃nd 45 minutes away from Suzuka in Nagoya). But could Ferrari have done anything earlier to identify the issue? Were all of the processes in place to deal with it?

Mercedes’ great strength throughout its title successes has been its response to issues and the structure to manage them. It is a well-oiled machine that rarely suffers setbacks - Hamil🌜ton hasn’t had a single 💞mechanical issue this year - but reacts well when they happen.

Ferrari, meanwhile, has snatched defeat from the jaws of victory in 2017. And if it took 10 y𒆙ears to build a title-winning car, how🦋 long will it be until the next one comes about?

Japanese GP: The Debrief - Match point Mercedes, Ferrari's failures

Red Bull’s late-season surge continues

Just as Ferrari has been collapsing, Red Bull has enjoyed a remarkable surge in form in the past couple of races to thrust itself very much into the thick of the battle at the front of t🎐he pack, with Max Verstappen’s near-miss at Suzuka being proof of its pace.

Vers💮tappen was uneasy about his chances in the race after qualifying, believing Mercedes and Ferrari would have a definite edge in the long runs, yet he was able to make a good start and keep close enough to Hamilton at the front to be a worry.

Red Bull brought Verstappen in at the perfect moment, getting tဣhe undercut and forcing Mercedes into an early-ish stop that left the paddock guessing whether they were one- or two-stopping. Verstappen was able to close to within two seconds of Hamilton, and even start to tail the net leader when teammate Valtteri Bottas started getting in his way, with the Finn playing the game well by moving aside and then making his Mercedes as wide as possible.

Japanese GP: The Debrief - Match point Mercedes, Ferrari's failures

Verstappen’s late charge as Hamilton struggled with a vibration on his tyre and struggled to find a clean route through the traffic gave Red Bull a sniff of a second straight win, and although it wasn’t to be, the display was massively encouraging hea𒆙ding into the final four races of the year and, more crucially, 2018.

With Daniel Ricciardo taking third, the result saw Red Bull clinch back-to-back double podiums for the firstꦏ time in the V6 turbo hybrid era. It may be an ominous sign of the form thꦯat is to come next year…

 

Palmer and Sainz wave goodbye with a whimper

Just as ♍the dust appeared to be settling in the F1 driver market, things were given a late shake-up on Saturday night when Renau♚lt announced that Jolyon Palmer would be leaving the team after the Japanese Grand Prix.

Renault had been trying to shuffle Palmer out ever since confirming the signing of Carlos Sainz Jr. in Singapore, but the Briton had always st⛄ressed he would see out the season, digging his heels in with his contract.

Renault was slightly less sour about the situation when he charged to sixth in Singapore, only for a difficult ✃outing in Malaysia two weeks later to flare up the concerns once again. Knowing his time was up and with a decent amount of money on the table, Palmer❀ decided enough was enough, calling it a day after Suzuka.

Japanese GP: The Debrief - Match point Mercedes, Ferrari's failures

Palmer said goodbye to Renault as he has spent much of his tiಌme with the team: anonymously. A long first stint to try and get the overcut and vault up the order did not work as planned, ꦓwith Palmer eventually taking 12th at the chequered flag.

He did, however, fare a good deal better than the man who will replace him, with Sainz crashing out on the opening lap as he tr𓆏ied to push and make up positions from 19th place on the grid.

Toro Rosso will bring Daniil Kvyat back for the final four races of the season, and while confusion remains over Pierre Gasly’s participation in Austin given the Super🤪 Formula clash, the Frenchman is expected to be at COTA that weekend.

 

Honda ends second McLaren era point-less at home

Expectations were high for McLaren throu🤡gh the Suzuka weekend given its recent good form and, more significantly, the fact it is engine partner Honda’s circuit and home race.

Despite the divorce proceedings being well underway and 💫the papers signed, McLaren and Honda were very much on the same side throughout the Japanese Grand Prix, putting on all the smiles and graces to make things easier for the kids…

However, the on-track di♊splay was yet again disappointing. Fernando Alonso was resigned to the back of the grid after being hit with a power unit penꦏalty that left Honda “ashamed”, according to F1 chief Yusuke Hasegawa.

Alonso pulled his usual trick of fighting up the order, getting a sniff of the points thanks to the various incidents ahead, and looked set to ta𝔉ke P10 as he bore down on Felipe Massa in the closing stages.

Ultimately it wasn’t to be. Blue flags for Hamilton and Verstappen plus the𓆏 Virtual Safety Car called following Lance Stroll’s stoppage slowed Alonso’s charge, leaving him to settle for 11th at the chequered flag.

With Stoffel Vandoorne being forced into an early visit to the pits that put him onto 🅺a two-st🅷op strategy, leaving him 14th at the flag, Honda’s point-less run at its home race was extended. The McLaren-Honda era has yielded not a single point at Suzuka, with Honda’s last top eight (back in the good ol’ days) finish at its home circuit coming back in 2006.

Japanese GP: The Debrief - Match point Mercedes, Ferrari's failures

At least the Japanese fans never disappoint at Suzuka and this year&n🍨bsp;was no exception...

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