HAM wins, then ROS +2s, then RIC +28s, VET +28s, VES +49s, RAI +49s.
Pretty boring race, to be honest. No major accidents or wild overtaking. Lewis got a better start than Nico, and led by Turn 1. Ricciardo blew past Nico on that first turn, but Nico got him back a turn later. RIC and VET had a good scrap. Young Max and Kimi had the most aggressive fight, with Kimi losing a good chunk of wing after a particularly aggressive defense from Max.
Up front, Lewis controlled the pace for the whole race, and was never seriously challenged. For all the effort Nico put in, you just got the feeling that Lewis had ample performance in reserve if he had ever needed it.
I was looking at the driving styles data on
www.formula1.com (don't know why, but I had never seen this before, as I always assumed it was behind the pay-wall). They monitor the drivers on 5 characteristics: Throttle, Steering, Brake, Cornering, and "Aggression", then assign a 1.0 to 10.0 index based on lowest-to-highest, then grade each driver on that scale.
Anyway - here's the data for a select set of leaders:
Code:
[FONT="Courier New"]
[SIZE="3"] THR STR BRK COR AGG
HAM 6.6 4.9 9.0 2.9 2.4
ROS 5.3 8.4 5.3 3.2 9.5
RIC 8.5 5.6 9.2 3.2 8.2
VET 9.1 5.8 10.0 2.9 4.4
VES 7.9 8.9 9.3 3.1 7.6
RAI 9.4 10.0 8.1 5.9 1.0
ALO 5.5 7.2 3.3 2.9 5.5
SAI 10.0 2.8 6.8 2.9 7.3
BOT 6.5 1.0 6.5 2.8 9.8[/SIZE]
[/FONT]
I find it fascinating that the same machines are driven in totally different styles. Compare HAM/ROS, RIC/VES, and VET/RAI for the Mercedes, Red Bull, and Ferrari for the match-ups.
Looking at Lewis vs Nico - it's amazing that Lewis out-accelerates and out-brakes Nico, but Nico develops much more aggressiveness, and has higher G's in the corners. Kimi's data is also amazing: lowest aggressiveness, but highest steering inputs.