Lauda has a point ofcourse, we've gotten to the point where tyre management has replaced the actual racing itself.
Let's have a look at Kimi, he was in fourth place after the first lap, but i don't remember him being within a second of the car in front of him, ever, in fact Kimi saved his tyres because he never had to fight with anyone on track, never during the whole race did he had to try and overtake another car, Kimi's strategy was based solely on avoiding the dirty air from any car in front of him.
Where Alonso, Massa, Vettel and Hamilton were within a second of each other several times and at least looked like they would try to overtake the car in front of them, and had to pay a price strategically wise, Kimi stayed far away from the other cars on track and fooled everybody with his hide and seek strategy.
When Sutil went to supersofts with an almost empty car, you would expect him to gain some places and see some overtakes, but none of that, the supersoft seems to be a qualifying tyre, with just 2 laps of maximum performance, after that they're even worse than 15 laps old mediums!
Sorry, but that's not racing.
Dr Ferdinand Porsche:" Nuvolari is the greatest driver of the past, the present, and the future".
Enzo Ferrari once drove with him and recalled even on bends "he never took his foot from the accelerator".
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