The Ratto Report – FCLV 2018 Biannual Review 1

The Ratto Report
FCLV 2018 Biannual
Review 1

stick

Opening Commentary

We open 2018 in pretty good shape considering the divisiveness that grips the country. Is Trump doing an ‘A’ job, or an ‘F’ job? Those seem to be the only choices. Meanwhile, the economy seems to be doing well (always a plus for a luxury goods manufacturer like Ferrari) and the stock market (spurred by tax revisions) is up big since the new president took office (another plus for Ferrari). However, success seems to have emboldened Trump to take some strong and controversial positions concerning tariffs which have caused some turmoil in the markets and some loss in economic confidence. And, allegations of impropriety (of little importance to me) and collusion (more important) continue. So, once again, we are all waiting to see the outcome of all this to-do.

In retrospect, it seems clear that the market for classic Ferraris peaked about 2-3 years ago, and has undergone a 10-15% correction since. This correction is likely a good thing so that a bubble was averted. Confidence in the market is evidenced by the fact that prices have remained stable now for the past 18 months, or so.

With that in mind, here is a recap of what transpired in the first half of 2018. We sincerely hope you were able to attend a few of these events, and that you will attend some future events over the next few months. Meanwhile, don’t forget to visit our NEW! IMPROVED! website at ferrariclubvegas.com for the latest news and information.

January 16: Board Meeting at the home of Dave and Elda Fanucchi

With 6 Board members (Chuck Damus, Elda Fanucchi, Ted Schlazer, Dan and Jan Fogle, and John Ratto) present, we had a good turn-out. New Board member Jan Fogle was seated as secretary and Elda Fanucchi was repositioned to event chairperson. Several non-Board members also attended, as they (and you!) are always welcome to do. Our financial situation was discussed, with an increase in the bottom line noted. It was especially nice to see that the Holiday Party generated some income. Other than that, the subject matter was the same as it has been for the previous several meetings: creating and selling merchandise to generate income, new members, past events (including the Holiday Party which all deemed a huge success and for which we thank the efforts of our Dealer – Towbin Motorcars), future drives and other events, and the progress of the Website, which is mostly complete and ready to be used. The next Board meeting was scheduled for March at the Bravo Cuccina Italiana in the Galleria Mall.

January 25: Social at Brio in Town Square

A good turnout was experienced despite the cold and blustery weather, and the rampant flu bug that forced several members to cancel attending at the last moment. The popular restaurant was quite crowded on a Thursday evening, so the atmosphere was festive and a nice evening was had by all.

February 22: Social at Mastrioni’s Italian Restaurant on Hualapai

By all reports, it was an excellent turnout and an animated evening of good food, excellent wine, and fine conversation at this local hot spot, known for its gourmet Italian cuisine and high priced wines. It might have even been better if the persistent flu bug had not reduced our numbers (we were part of the group that called in sick this time).

March 13: Board Meeting at Bravo Cucina Italiana in the Galleria Mall

With 6 Board members in attendance, along with 4-5 regular members to boot, we had a stellar turnout. In fact, it seemed like half the entire club was there, and more like a social than a Board meeting, especially since this is such a nice restaurant with quite good food. If you are looking for a nice affordable Italian place, check Bravo Cucina Italiana out. Most of the meeting was devoted to discussion on updating and maintaining the website (ferrariclubvegas.com – check it out), our relationship with Towbin Motorcars (our dealer), and future events and activities. One of the attending members, Gentille Chhun, presented an idea being considered by several Hollywood producers for a series of TV lifestyle programs centering on the Ferrari mystique. This was discussed and we generally agreed to participate, with further discussions and considerations to be held if the concept develops toward reality. Sounds interesting!

March 22: Social at The Bootlegger

After an extended period of mingling at the bar during which everyone ‘got in the mood,’ our large group moved in for the main course. A highlight of the evening was Oz passing around a phot of his 20 year-old self beside a 1948 Buick, his first car. Then, he passed around another photo of his present self with the same car, which he still owns. Wow! In the investing world that is known as a maximum buy-and-hold strategy.

April 22: Concorso Ferrari in Pasadena

After two disappointing years with little participation by the older, classic Ferrari models, this year saw a spectacular turn out of a massive number of ‘the greats.’ There were numerous examples of 250 Series 2 PF Cabriolets, 250 GT Lussos, 275 GTBs, 330 GTCs, and Daytonas and Dinos. Then there were a few real rarities: an exquisite Series 1 250 PF Cabriolet, certainly a one-off, a Vignale bodied 212, and even a 166 coupe (one of the very first Ferraris ever built). For the younger crowd, there were the modern supercars: several 288 GTOs, at least one F40 and one F50, a couple of Enzos, and a slew of La Ferraris (open and closed). In all, these lovelies made up about a third of the 150+ cars on display. The others were your run-of-the-mill (by Ferrari standards anyway) 308s, 328s, 360s, 550s, etc. Most impressive and I have to take my hat off to our brethren of the Southwest Region for making this happen. Bravo! Forza! To boot, the 328 GTS owned by one of our members, Lindsey Freeman, kicked butt and took names to the tune of 99 points (of a possible 100) in the tough FCA judging.

In short, if you missed this one, you missed a great show. And, admission was free.

April 26: Social at the Italian-American Club

We had a strong turn-out of nearly 20 members for this excursion into the world of fine Italian dining. We began with drinks at the commodious bar, and then moved to a private VIP room set aside for our group. The food was excellent and moderately priced, and the service was spot-on. The conversation was animated and jovial. A fine evening was had by all.

April 29: Drive to Seven Magic Mountains and the Pioneer Saloon

On a perfect late April Las Vegas morning, 13 members set forth in their intrepid steeds to visit one of Las Vegas’ lesser known, but most interesting, attractions, the Seven Magic Mountains, a massive display of modern art just 8 miles south of the M Resort. After some photos, and a few hijinks, the group saddled back up and drove to the Pioneer Saloon in Goodsprings for a fine lunch and one or two high octane jots to their tanks. Everyone seemed to have a great time, as is evidenced by the photos displayed on our website (go to NEWS and then DRIVES).

Late April/Early May: Michael Obradovich

We were stunned to learn that Michael Obradovich, a guy who seemed hale and hearty, had suffered a stroke. Michael chose to counter this setback the way he does everything – full tilt. As a result, it now seems that he has overcome the malady and is well on the way to a full recovery. We all send our prayers and well wishes to Michel and his wife, Karen, for a speedy recovery.

May 8: Board Meeting at the Home of Jan and Dan Fogle

We thank Dan and Jan for hosting the Board. Several guests attended to spice up the proceedings, but the usual issues, including ways to generate income and potential future events (including the upcoming drive to Echo Bay), dominated the discussion. Website maintenance costs were also addressed, and it was noted that our Chapter has several new members.

May 20: Drive to Lake Mead – Echo Bay and Lunch at Lake Las Vegas

Las Vegas is a place where nothing stays the same – we all know that. But, sometimes the changes are so fast and furious (would that make a good name for a movie franchise, maybe one about fast cars and street racing, I wonder) that it is impossible to stay ahead of them. Our first starting point was pre-empted by the Electronic Daisy Festival. Our planned route was pre-empted by the EDC and Project Neon road closures. In response, to avoid these snafus, we completely revised the drive, and in the process changed the original destination from The Valley of Fire to Echo Bay. So, a disaster, right? Nope, it was a great event even though only 4 cars participated. The road along the Lake was deserted, virtually no traffic and no smokies. And the temperature, which could have easily been over 100 degrees, was in the low 90s. The cars all ran without fault. And, everyone gave a big thumbs up to the food at our lunch spot, Luna Rossa in Lake Las Vegas. A good event to close out Spring 2018.

May 31: Social at Table 34

We had a strong turnout (15 – 20) for this social at one of the Club’s favorite restaurants. As usual, we started with appetizers (delicious and kindly provided by Table 34) on the patio. A bit later, we judged the evening so pleasant that the attendees voted 100% to also have dinner al-fresco. Everyone seemed to love the food and congenial conversation – a good time was had by all.

But the real highlight of the evening was the attendance of Michael Obradovich and his wife Karen. Only a month after suffering his stroke, Michael looked great and seemed to be in excellent spirits. We all welcome him back and wish him well in his path to a 100% recovery.

UPCOMING EVENTS

Socials will resume in September, after the heat of summer is a fading memory. The big Columbus Day event at Siena Restraint should be in mid-October. Meanwhile, be sure to visit our new website for the latest information. FerrariClubVegas.com

WRAP UP – JANUARY THROUGH JUNE 2018

We have all survived another 6 months, relatively unscathed. Despite many dire predictions, life and society are moving forward in measured steps and the sky has not fallen. The stock market is at about the same level as it was in January, and I don’t think many would have predicted that.

So, everything is progressing well except for this nasty TRADE WAR thing that seems to be the new, number one issue of discussion.

FORMULA 1 NEWS RECAP

Introduction to the 2018 F1 season

The word emanating from testing in Spain was that the cars are faster than ever (when it wasn’t snowing!), and that the top teams are very close. As two weeks of testing drew to a close, Mercedes still looked like top dog, but Ferrari and Red Bull were hot on their tail. It seemed a different manufacturer ‘won’ each practice session. Sound familiar? Yes, that’s basically what I said last year. But, that should make you happy because 2017 was a great, competitive year on track. In fact, at the midpoint of 2017 I said, “This is one of the best seasons in recent memory.” So, let’s have more of that in 2018 – with Ferrari on top this time! Then, on the penultimate day of testing, Vettel, in the Ferrari, set what would be the fastest overall time of all. Then, on the last day of practice, Raikkonen, in the second Ferrari, set the second fastest overall time (just 4/100 of a second slower than Vettel). This doesn’t mean a lot, but it is certainly better than not having the fastest times. The other big news concerns McLaren’s switch to Renault engines, which (along with top driver Fernando Alonso) should bring a perennial powerhouse back to the front of the field. Also, Pirelli has added a new tire compound, the hyper-softs, which is even softer than the ultra-softs (super-hyper-ultra-soft tires will be coming next year).

Another big change – F1 is on a different network this year. ESPN will be our new provider, and it is different. The announcers (with Martin Brundle and someone known as ‘Crofty?’ in the booth) and Paul De Resta doing commentary) with Martin Brundle are different, the graphics and the music are different, the F1 logo is different. Leigh Diffey is gone. David Hobbs and Steve Matchet are gone. It all feels younger and hipper. Strangely, ESPN butchered the first race of the season with commercials, and then broadcast the next races with virtually no commercials at all. Have no fear as to what may transpire on this front though; you can always find kindred souls at Siena on Sunday mornings watching Qualifying and the races – with the commercials deleted!

This year will see 21 races, tying 2016 for most ever. While the Malaysian GP has been removed from the schedule, GPs have been added in France and Germany, two stalwarts that have been absent in recent years. The race in the US will be run on October 21.

As for changes concerning the cars and drivers, there are a few including two rookie drivers. The Saubers are now the Alfa-Romeo Saubers, with corresponding Alfa-Romeo livery and (again) with Ferrari engines; the Red Bulls are now the Aston Martin Red Bulls. Toro Rosso has switched to Honda engines, the only team that will be using them. Rookie drivers include Frenchman Charles Leclerc (the highly regarded, reigning F2 champion who will team up with Marcus Ericsson at A-R Sauber) and Russian Sergey Sirotkin, who will join last year’s impressive rookie, Lance Stroll, at Williams-Mercedes, which performed terribly at Barcelona testing. Last year’s new comers, Pierre Gasly and Brandon Hartley will drive for Toro Rosso. Felipe Massa is retired; Daniel Kvyat has been banished to the minor leagues. There are still 20 cars in the field.

Oh, and one more thing: the cars have some sort of a protective frame (called the Halo) in front of and around the driver’s cockpit for additional protection. It looks really, really weird, almost as strange as Sebastian Vettel’s new punk-rock haircut.

March through June: F1 Viewing at Siena and other venues

March 25: GP of Australia (1)

Pirelli supplied the soft, super-soft, and ultra-soft tires for the 58 lap race around the 3.3 mile circuit in Melbourne. It didn’t matter much as everyone was on the intermediate wet tires for most of the rain plagued practice sessions. Despite treacherous conditions, local favorite Daniel Ricciardo (Red Bull) managed to earn a 3 grid spot penalty for failing to slow sufficiently quickly for a red flag. Meanwhile, the Red Bulls, along with the McLarens, looked to be fasted in the wet.

It was sunny and cool for Qualifying, and the times were very close, with Ferrari and Mercedes quickest in Q1 and Q2, followed closely by Red Bull-Renault and Haas-Ferrari!, our own American team (as Jim Nabors would say, ‘surprise-surprise!’). Bottas in the Mercedes had a massive shunt at the start of Q3, and was out of the fray. To add insult to injury, he damaged his transmission in the crash and was penalized 5 grid spots (to 15th) for changing it. His mechanics did manage to repair the car so that he could participate in the race. With Qualifying drawing to a close, Hamilton did a ‘perfect’ lap and grabbed the pole while Vettel made a small mistake and had to settle for third. The starting order would be Hamilton, Raikkonen, Vettel, Verstappen (Red Bull), Magnussen and Grosjean (both for Haas), and Ricciardo (demoted to 7th as a result of the aforementioned penalty). The Red Bulls opted to start on the super-soft tires while every other team chose the ultra-softs.

Race day brought out the famous Australian sunshine and it was very warm, quite different conditions than during Practice or Qualifying. The start was tight and highly contested, but there were no collisions and the running order remained unchanged at the end of lap 1, except that Magnussen in the Haas passed Verstappen for 4th place. Of greater significance, after the first few laps were completed, Hamilton was not pulling away from the Ferraris, and the leaders were not pulling away from the rest of the field. The top 7 or 8 cars were all running at pretty much the same pace. Perhaps of even greater importance, Bottas was still mired in 15th. Was his rebuilt car having problems? Or, have the Mercedes lost their advantage over the field? Very interesting.

After 10 laps were in the books, the running order remained Hamilton, Raikkonen, Vettel, Magnussen, Verstappen, Grosjean, and Ricciardo, all running relatively close together. Bottas, meanwhile, had moved up to 13th, not much progress. On lap 18, Raikkonen was the first to stop for fresh rubber, switching to the soft tires, which everyone believed would make it to the end of the race. Hamilton and Verstappen stopped for tires in the next few laps (also choosing to go with the softs), leaving Vettel in the lead over Hamilton (about 13 seconds behind) and Raikkonen (a few seconds behind Hamilton) and the two Haas-Ferraris (several seconds farther back). Then, starting on lap 23, both the Haas cars stopped, and all hell broke loose. First, Magnussen stopped, rejoined the fray, discovered that one of his wheel nuts had not been properly tightened, and parked his car at the side of the track. Then, two laps later, the exact same calamity hit Grosjean in the other Haas. Faulty air gun(s)? Faulty wheel nuts? Idiots in the pits? Whatever the cause(s), it was a cruel blow to Haas, which was experiencing its finest hour ever. And, there were now two cars stranded beside the track. Consequently, the Virtual Safety Car was deployed (lap 26).

Naturally, Vettel pitted for tires (softs) immediately and, because Hamilton was going so slowly on track to conform to the requirements of the VSC, he was able to rejoin still in the lead! Riccardo also pitted (softs) and also gained an advantage over the cars ahead of him. Then, the real Safety Car was deployed and the field bunched up behind it, which gave a further advantage to the Red Bulls who by this time had dropped some distance behind the leaders. When real racing resumed on lap 31, the running order, all nose-to-tail, was Vettel, Hamilton, Raikkonen, Ricciardo, Alonzo (McLaren), and Verstappen. With the retirement of both Haas cars, Bottas jumped to 9th.

From that point to the end of the race, it was advantage Vettel. Running in clear air and on fresher tires, he was able to hold off Hamilton despite Hamilton’s ability to use the DRS to gain a speed advantage on the straights. Hamilton mounted a few challenges, but he never got close to passing Vettel. He eventually had to drop back to preserve his tires, and at the end of the race was being pressured by Raikkonen for second. The final outcome was Vettel, Hamilton, Raikkonen, Ricciardo, Alonso – in the rejuvenated McLaren, Verstappen, Hulkenberg (Renault), and Bottas. Rookie Charles Leclerc, driving quickly and smartly, managed 13th in the A-R Sauber-Ferrari,

The Australian Grand Prix was great for Ferrari…and not so great for cars powered by Mercedes engines. Yes, Hamilton finished second, but Bottas had a most difficult time working his way up the field after starting 15th. Last year he would have finished 4th, not 8th. The Force India-Mercedes cars were a threat for podium finishes last year; they were far off the pace in Australia, qualifying poorly and finishing out of the points entirely. The Williams-Mercedes were back-markers in Australia, not even in the mid-pack where they ran last year. And, last year, Hamilton, with the superior power of his Mercedes engine and so many laps to do so, would have simply forced his way by Vettel to take the lead and the win. This year in Australia, Vettel was able to defend his position from Hamilton’s advances, and Haas, with Ferrari power, was challenging for the podium. So, this all begs the question: Has the Mercedes engine lost the horsepower advantage it has enjoyed for the past 5 years??

April 8: GP of Bahrain (2)

Pirelli supplied the medium, soft, and super-soft tires for this 57 lap, night race in the hot Middle East. The Ferraris looked to be fastest in the Practice sessions, while the Mercedes looked to be having cooling problems in the heat of the day. To make matters worse for Mercedes (and better for Ferrari), Hamilton was given a 5 grid spot penalty for changing his transmission.

Verstappen in the Red Bull crashed heavily in Q1, and was relegated to 15th on the starting grid. In response to his penalty, Hamilton contested Q2 on the soft tires (everyone else in the top 10 qualified and would start on the super-softs), meaning he would start on the softs, and indicating he planned for a long first stint and a one stop strategy. With the Mercedes cars running better in the cooler evening temperatures and Raikkonen complaining of traffic, the Qualifying order was Vettel, Raikkonen, Bottas, Hamilton (who would start 9th, on the soft tires, after his penalty), Ricciardo, Pierre Gasly (of all people) in the Toro Rosso-Honda (of all cars-engines), and Kevin Magnussen in the Haas (another surprise). The Mercedes powered Force Indias and Williams were non-factors in Qualifying, lending credence to the belief that the Mercedes engine has lost its horsepower advantage. In the post-Qualifying interviews, it was obvious that Vettel was most happy with the characteristics and performance of the car, always good to hear.

Except for Bottas’ pass of Raikkonen in the first corner, the first lap was relatively uneventful. On lap 2, though, Verstappen, who had made an amazing start, tried to push by Hamilton, resulting in a collision and a punctured tire for Verstappen. He had to pit, and immediately thereafter retired from the race due to unspecified issues. His teammate, Ricciardo also parked his Red Bull (electrical gremlins) at about the same time. In response to all the dead Bulls strewn about the track, the Virtual Safety Car was deployed. When racing resumed on lap 4, a series of wheel-to-wheel tussles broke out that were most entertaining to watch. These continued through lap 12, when Magnussen and Alonso were the first to stop for fresh rubber, both switching to the medium compound tires, indicating they planned a one-stop race. By lap 18, Vettel was clearly slowing and having tire problems. In response, he stopped for fresh rubber, opting for the soft tires, indicating he planned a two stop race. This prompted a rash of stops, including Raikkonen on lap 20 (to the softs) and Bottas on lap 21 (mediums). Clearly, the Ferraris and the Mercedes were on different strategies. At lap 22, the running order was Hamilton (no stops), Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Gasly.

Hamilton, who had started on the soft tires, delayed his pit stop to lap 27. Like his teammate, he also switched to the medium rubber and was good to the end of the race. He rejoined in 4th place and now on the freshest tires of the leaders, began to reel them in. Then, on lap 36 something really bizarre happened. Raikkonen made his second stop and there were problems. A wheel refused to come off…a mechanic was struggling with it…Raikkonen got the signal to go…and the mechanic was smacked (broken leg). (All I can say is that when 2 second pit stops are de-rigour, there will be occasional problems.) When the dust settled, Raikkonen was out and Ferrari decided to switch Vettel’s to a one-stop strategy, meaning he had to go to the end of the race on the soft tires that had been on his car since lap 18. Vettel had the lead, but could he hold it for 20 more laps from his pursuers who were on fresher and more durable tires?

With Vettel now nursing his worn tires and finding it difficult to pass lapped traffic, Bottas and Hamilton began to cut into his lead at about ½ second per lap. Initially, the Mercedes duo was making ground quickly, but then around lap 45 their advantage seemed to lessen, and Vettel’s lead was only diminishing by a few tenths of seconds per lap. Then, finally, on lap 55, Bottas (Hamilton never did mount a real challenge) caught the struggling Ferrari, but even with the advantage of the DRS and far superior tires he could not pass. Vettel wins! The final result was Vettel, Bottas, Hamilton (petulant in the cool-off room), Gasly (Toro Rosso), Magnussen (Haas), Hulkenberg (Renault), and Alonso (McLaren).

This was a tremendously exacting race, with all sorts of cloak-and-dagger plots and a finish for the ages. Vettel’s victory was just sort of miraculous, perhaps something ordained from the Vatican? With two wins in two races, his drive to the championship has had a resounding start. Is this year the ever hoped for ‘next year’ we have been waiting for?

One more note: After my complaints regarding too many commercials during the Australian GP, there were essentially NO commercials during the Practice, Qualifying, or the race this week. Very strange.

April 15: GP of China (3)

Practice sessions were run in cold and windy conditions. The lap times of the top 6 cars (Ferrari, Mercedes, and Red Bull) were very close in P1 and P2. Then, in P3 on Saturday morning, Ricciardo (Red Bull) experienced transmission issues, and then he blew his engine. It looked as if he would not be ready for qualifying that afternoon and therefore be out of the race. In addition, Hamilton had a massive spin (540 degrees) and was lucky not to have damaged his car.

Pirelli supplied the medium, soft, and ultra-soft (skipping the super-soft) tires for the 56 lap race over the 3.4 mile course. This track is known for being abrasive and wearing tires quickly. Either one or two stop strategies were being contemplated. It was still cold, windy, and damp for Qualifying on Saturday afternoon. Ricciardo’s pit crew managed to change engines in the few hours available and have him ready for the final minutes of Q1; he managed to set a quick enough time to squeeze into Q2. Meanwhile, the Ferraris topped the time charts. The Mercedes and Ferraris contested Q2 on the soft tires, meaning they could start the race on them, indicating they planned a one stop strategy. Most of the others, including the Red Bulls, opted to start on the ultra-soft rubber, indicating they planned two stops. Everyone contested Q3 on the ultra-soft tires, and the final order at the front of the grid was no surprise: Vettel, Raikkonen, Bottas, Hamilton, Verstappen, and Ricciardo. The surprise was that the Ferraris were ½ a second (a big margin) faster than the Mercedes.

Sunday was sunny and breezy, much warner than the previous days. The grandstands in Shanghai were notably packed (mainly with Kimi Raikkonen fans), a good sign for the sport in that country and that part of the world. Immediately after the start, Vettel veered hard right and cut off Raikkonen, which seemed a dumb move. In response, Kimi had to back-off, allowing both Bottas and Verstappen to pass him. So, Vettel had opponents instead of a friend behind him. Otherwise, the start was uneventful, and at the end of lap 1 the order was Vettel, Bottas, Verstappen, Raikkonen, Hamilton, and Ricciardo. The order remained the same at lap 10, by which time Vettel had established a three second lead over Bottas (who was applying no pressure to the leader) in second, and Hamilton seemed to be falling progressively farther behind Raikkonen. It looked as if Vettel would win easily at this point. Despite the lack of action at the front, there were several heated battles in the mid-field that were worthy of attention.

Verstappen and Ricciardo, who had started on the ultra-soft tires, were the first of the lead group to stop (lap 18), but Hamilton also stopped on the following lap. Bottas then stopped (a quick one) on lap 20. Rejoining in clean air and on new tires, he proceeded to set a blistering lap (I bet Vettel wished he had Raikkonen between them to ward off Bottas’ charge), and managed to wrest the lead from Vettel who stopped (a slow one) on lap 21. Everyone mentioned switched to the medium tires, indicating all were planning one stop strategies. So, on lap 25, the running order was Raikkonen, who had not stopped, Bottas, Vettel, Verstappen, Hamilton, and Ricciardo. Bottas and Vettel, both on fresh tires, then quickly tracked down Raikkonen and passed him easily (on lap 27) for the lead, at which point Raikkonen stopped for fresh tires and rejoined in 6th place. Therefore, it seemed that both the Mercedes and the Red Bulls had used superior pit stop timing to snooker both of the Ferraris!

Then, on lap 31, all previous strategies were thrown out the window. It started out innocently, with the two Toro Rossos contesting a corner and colliding softly, causing damage to their front wings. But, the damaged wings scattered sharp debris across the track, forcing the safety car to be deployed (lap 32) so that the debris could be removed. Blind luck put the two Red Bulls just a few hundred yards short of pit entry when the safety car deployment was announced. Shrewd, quick thinking led to them being called into the pits for fresh tires while everyone else stayed out and paraded slowly for a couple of laps. The Red Bulls rejoined the fray on brand new soft tires (everyone else was on worn mediums) having lost almost no track position, Verstappen in fourth (lost one spot) and Ricciardo in sixth (ditto). They were now sharks on a feeding frenzy to the front of the pack. It was fast and furious – absent Vin Diesel.

On lap 37: Ricciardo blew past Raikkonen for fifth place.

On lap 39: Verstappen attempted to pass Hamilton, failed, slowed, and was in turn passed by Ricciardo.

On lap 41: Ricciardo caught and passed Hamilton (with an audacious move) for third.

On lap 42: Verstappen re-caught Hamilton and passed him for fourth. Ricciardo passed Vettel for second. Meanwhile, Raikkonen (who was the last to stop for medium tires and therefore had the best of those) caught Hamilton and was challenging him for fifth.

On lap 43: Verstappen caught Vettel (running third) and made an ill-advised attempted to pass him. They collided. Both came to a virtual stop. Vettel’s car and tires were damaged and Verstappen was given a 10 second penalty. Despite having to swerve and slow down to avoid contact, Hamilton was able to pass them both, but this allowed Raikkonen to cruise by Hamilton and claim third place. With a compromised car, Vettel slowed and was never again a factor. He finished eighth.

On Lap 45: Ricciardo passed Bottas for the lead.

On lap 48: Verstappen passed Hamilton for fourth on the track, but fifth considering his 10 second time penalty.

So, did you get all of that? Substitute begetting for passing and it could be the Book of Genesis. But, seriously, these were probably the most tense and exciting 10 laps of F1 racing ever. After all of this strangeness, the final official finishing order was Ricciardo (who barely made it into Qualifying), Bottas (extremely lucky to place this high), Raikkonen (whose day was compromised by bad team strategy and Vettel’s strange antics at the start), Hamilton (who was never on the pace or a serious contender), Verstappen (with his 10 second penalty, if he had bided his time he could have won), Hulkenberg, Alonso, and Vettel (the God’s didn’t favor him today, that’s for sure).

Poor strategy and bad luck robbed Ferrari of a deserved 1-2 finish in China. To win the championship, a team must win the races where it has the fastest cars. Down the road, Ferrari may come to lament its poor race management in China.

Vettel still leads the driver’s standings with 54 points. Hamilton (45) and Bottas (40) are now close behind him. Mercedes (85 points) and Ferrari (84) are in a virtual dead heat atop the constructors’ standings, with Red Bull significantly behind (55 points). This is getting interesting.

April 29: GP of Azerbaijan (4)

Qualifying was contested in cool, breezy conditions, meaning it was hard to get the tires up to temperature…resulting in low grip. This made for scary conditions on a street circuit with little run-off area and top speeds well over 200 mph. Pirelli supplied the soft, super-soft, and ultra-soft tires for the 51 lap race over the 3.7 mile circuit. The drivers, meanwhile, believed that the new hyper-softs might have been best. After the dust, and more than a few raindrops, had settled, the starting order was Vettel, Hamilton, Bottas, Ricciardo, Verstappen, and Raikkonen, who would have been much closer to the front absent a big spin in Q3. Of note: Raikkonen was to start on the ultra-soft rubber, while all of the other top cars would be on the super-soft tires.

Race day was even colder and windier than Qualifying. Grip was going to be a serious concern, especially if tires were cold. Meanwhile, there was a large crowd at Siena to view the proceedings. They were treated to the de-rigor collision on lap 1. Sirotkin (Williams) smacked Ocon (Force India) who veered into Raikkonen. Both Sirotkin and Ocon were out, while Kimi had to pit immediately for new tires (he opted for the softs, which might be good to go to the end of the race) and a new nose. The Safety Car was deployed, and when racing resumed on lap 6 the order was Vettel, Hamilton, Bottas, Ricciardo, and Verstappen. Sainz and Hulkenberg, who had started on the (faster) ultra-soft tires, were moving fast and immediately challenged the two Red Bulls, while Raikkonen was near the rear of the field. A real battle royal then developed between the Red Bulls themselves and also between the Red Bulls and the Renaults over positions 4 – 7. Sainz squeezed by Verstappen, and then Hulkenberg passed Verstappen and Ricciardo (who both seemed to be having issues with their electrical motors). Meanwhile, the two Red Bulls were going at it lap-after-lap, wheel-to-wheel (including banging wheels several times) between themselves as they fell further behind the leaders. Very exciting stuff! While all of this was happening, Vettel was serenely in the lead and pulling away from the field, and Raikkonen was picking off the cars ahead of him, working his way back to the front. He was 8th by lap 15 and 6th by lap 17.

Despite the fact that lap times were not slowing, meaning that the super-soft tires were long-lived, Hamilton stopped early for new tires on lap 22, opting for the soft rubber. He returned in third place, and his out lap was slow, emphasizing the point that cold tires were slow tires. All the others soldiered on, waiting for something to happen (an accident and Safety Car period) to gain an advantage in their pit stop. On lap 25, the running order was Vettel, Bottas (10 seconds behind), Hamilton (18 seconds farther behind, but on new tires after his stop), Ricciardo, Verstappen, and Raikkonen (who had stopped on lap 1). Hulkenberg was out after hitting a wall; Sainz had stopped for fresh tires. Of note was that the two Red Bulls were still running in lock step and battling tooth-and-nail for 4th place, far behind the leaders. Although lap times continued to be consistent, Vettel stopped for tires (he opted for the soft rubber-the safe choice, although the ultra-softs were a reasonable alternative at this point in the proceedings) on lap 31. He rejoined in second place (behind Bottas) and, like Hamilton had to suffer through a couple of slow laps while his new tires came up to temperature. Meanwhile, Bottas (who had not yet stopped) consolidated his hold on the lead. On lap 38, Ricciardo, the leading Red Bull, stopped for tires (going to the ultra-softs). He also experienced a slow out lap, and lost 4th place to Verstappen who stopped (going to ultra-softs) on lap 39. With Verstappen now on the colder, slower tires, Ricciardo caught him quickly and made several attempts to pass, all of which Verstappen countered most aggressively. Finally, on the long straight, Ricciardo moved into Verstappen’s slip stream and tried to dispatch his teammate on the right – rebuffed, and then the left – rebuffed, and then on the right again – BIG collision. Both Red Bulls were out!

With the Safety Car deployed to allow the course workers to remove the massive amount of debris on the track, everyone pitted and mounted new ultra-soft tires. All this was a huge advantage to Bottas, who got to make only one stop, and in a Safety Car speed environment to boot. He was thus able to retain first place. Then, as the cars were moving slowly behind the Safety Car, Grosjean (Haas) had brain fade while swerving about to try to warm his tires; he smacked the wall. Result? A lot more debris on the track and an extension to the Safety Car period. Now everyone’s tires were really cold.

Immediately after the Safety Car left the track on lap 48 (only three laps from the finish), Vettel tried a bold move to pass Bottas and regain the lead. It looked good, but his tires were cold and he failed to maintain control, sliding across the track, allowing both Hamilton and Raikkonen to pass him. To add insult to injury, Vettel’s new ultra-softs were flat spotted and he could no longer challenge those ahead; instead he was passed by Perez (Force India) for fourth place. Then, to heap some further insult, race leader Bottas ran over a piece of debris that was inexplicably missed in the clean-up effort, and shredded a tire. He had to stop immediately. If Vettel had bided his time, he would have won! After all of that action, the final two laps were without further incident and the final finishing order was Hamilton, Raikkonen, Perez, Vettel, Sainz (Renault), Leclerc (Alfa-Romeo Sauber-Ferrari), and Alonzo (McLaren).

So, Vettel and Ferrari were robbed of another victory that was seemingly ‘in-the-bag.’ This is becoming an old tale, and a disheartening one. At the end of the season, will Ferrari, and Ferrari fans, be looking back at these results and crying over what might have been? Meanwhile, Hamilton, who has really done very little this year, leads the championship battle over Vettel by 4 points, with Raikkonen third, Bottas fourth, and Ricciardo fifth. Crash Verstappen is eighth, 52 points in arrears.

The church bells were not ringing in Maranello this Sunday.

May 13: GP of Spain (5)

Pirelli supplied the medium, soft, and super-soft tires for the 66 lap race over the 2.9 mile track in Barcelona, a venue the drivers were familiar with as it hosted winter testing. It was so windy during Friday practice that the handling of the cars was being affected. That, combined with the fact that the track had recently been resurfaced – reducing grip, resulted in difficult conditions and problems bringing the tires up to temperature. As a result, there was little difference between times set on the soft and super-soft rubber. Raikkonen had some engine issues in Practice 2 that were an omen for problems to come.

Qualifying was run in cool, cloudy, and windy conditions with rain possible, meaning that tire temperature and grip problems continued to plague the cars. Virtually every car ran Q2 on the soft tires so that the race could be started on them. Conversely, everyone chose the super-softs for Q3, but the resulting times were not much faster. It seemed that the teams were hoping that one stop at about lap 20-25 (and switching to the mediums at that point) would be sufficient. The starting order was Hamilton, Bottas, Vettel, Raikkonen, Verstappen, Ricciardo, Magnussen, and Alonso, not a surprising result as this was seen as a track were Mercedes would do well.

After a big rain on Saturday night that washed the track clean of its built up rubber (further reducing grip), race day was cool, cloudy, and windy, with rain possible. Vettel managed to pass Bottas into corner one, but the obligatory collision in the mid-field (due partly to the lack of grip) was postponed to corner 3, eliminating Grosjean, Hulkenberg, and Gasly. The Safety Car was deployed and racing resumed on lap 6. On lap 10, the order was Hamilton (pulling away slowly from the field), Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Ricciardo. Barcelona is a track where it is notoriously difficult to pass, and not much happened at the front until lap 18, when Vettel was the first to stop for fresh tires, switching (as expected) to the mediums. The question: would they make it to the end of the 66 lap race? Bottas was the next to stop (lap 20), also switching to the medium rubber. Raikkonen’s iffy engine gave up on lap 25, and he was out; at about the same time Hamilton stopped for new tires.

Meanwhile, having delayed their stops, the Red Bulls were now out front. They finally stopped for fresh tires on laps 34/35, also mounting the mediums. So, with everyone now having stopped, the running order was once again Hamilton (unchallenged at the front), Vettel, Bottas, Verstappen, Ricciardo, and Magnussen. Not much happened until lap 41, when Ocon (Force India) suffered an engine failure that caused the Virtual Safety Car to be deployed. Sensing a possible advantage and that running his existing tires (on since lap 18) to the end was risky, and thinking that the Mercedes might also need to make second stop, Vettel pitted for new medium tires (why not softs?). His stop was longer than normal and Vettel returned in fourth place behind ‘Crash’ Verstappen, a driver who is notoriously difficult to pass. At first, it seemed that Verstappen would make matters simple. As soon as the green flag flew, he immediately tried to pass lapped traffic, and, in a crazy move, ran his front wing into the rear of Lance Stroll’s Williams. He was lucky: the damage was minimal, and he managed to continue and to maintain third place ahead of Vettel, who was clearly faster but unable to get close enough in Verstappen’s dirty air to make a move. The final result: Hamilton, Bottas, Verstappen, Vettel, Ricciardo, and Magnussen (Haas).

The pundits predicted that Mercedes would do well at Barcelona, and they were proved correct. At the completion of Qualifying, there was little doubt that Hamilton would win, absent extenuating circumstances. On the other hand, unlucky Vettel and Ferrari were again dealt a strange hand. Stuck in second place with the oldest tires in the field, making a second pit stop under the Virtual Safety Car seemed the correct thing to do. It might put Vettel in a position to challenge Hamilton at the end, and it almost certainly would lock-up second spot over Bottas. It did neither. The slow stop dropped Vettel behind both Bottas and Verstappen, and Vettel was unable to pass either of them. I still wonder why they chose to mount the mediums instead of the (faster) softs, but that was obviously what the Ferrari engineers deemed best at the time.

So, once again, Ferrari failed to score the points they deserved, and now Hamilton has a 17 point lead over Vettel in the Drivers’ championship.

May 27: GP of Monaco (6)

Pirelli supplied the super-soft, ultra-soft, and hyper-soft (the first time these have been made available) for this 78 lap race through the streets of the principality, where the path is narrow and twisty, and passing is tres difficile. It was hot during the Practice sessions, when the Red Bulls set fastest times, and it looked like the hyper-softs would be fast, but very short lived. ‘Crash’ Verstappen was up to his tricks and had a massive shunt in P3. His car could not be repaired for Qualifying, and he was relegated to the back of the field.

Temperatures were again high for Qualifying, when even the fast drivers (the top 10) were essentially forced to run (and thereby start the race on) the new hyper-soft rubber to make it into Q3. When all was said and done, there were no surprises in the starting order: Ricciardo, Vettel, Hamilton, Raikkonen, and Bottas. Verstappen would be last, but on the more durable ultra-soft tires.

The Gods threw a weather curve-ball for the race; it was cloudy, cool, and windy, with rain possible. The start was clean with no collisions, and the leaders finished lap 1 in the same order they started. It looked as if Ricciardo was not pressing at the front, but was still managing to pull away slowly from Vettel. Meanwhile, Verstappen was progressively passing the cars ahead of him. He was 16th by lap 7, and 14th by lap 8.

As expected, the hyper-soft tires faded fast. Hamilton was the first to stop for tires (lap 12), mounting the ultra-softs (which, given the temperatures, might make it to the end). Soon thereafter, Vettel, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, and Bottas also stopped, all opting for the ultra-softs except Bottas, who made a more conservative choice, the super-softs. Not much changed as a result of these stops, and the running order was still Ricciardo, Vettel, Hamilton, Raikkonen, and Bottas at lap 25.

Then, on about lap 30, things got interesting. Ricciardo was having problems with his hybrid power unit and losing overall power, and slowing down. Vetted caught him easily, but passing proved impossible. In the process, Vettel wore his tires and had to drop back. Although he tried to pass Ricciardo several more times, he never really mounted a serious threat and simply had to give it up. Meanwhile, all the other front runners, also on ultra-softs, were also experiencing greater tire degradation than expected, and slowing down. Only Bottas, who had chosen the super-softs, looked like he would make it to the end without another pit stop. As a result, the leaders were slowing and the field was bunching up behind them. At lap 50, the running order was Ricciardo, Vettel, Hamilton, Raikkonen, and Bottas, all running in close formation. Verstappen, who had delayed his first pit stop to lap 48, was in 11th, and had the best tires that allowed him to set the fastest lap times.

This set up a dilemma for the team strategists. Would the leaders need to stop again? If so, were they staying out in hopes that a Safety Car period would mitigate their time penalties for such a stop? Were they delaying such a stop to about lap 60, when they could switch to the hyper-soft tires for a last, mad sprint to the finish? In the end, they all did nothing. The wisdom said that stopping for tires and then being able to go significantly faster would be more than countered by needing to pass the field of bunched up cars that they would be behind when they rejoined the race.

In the end, the field crawled around the track behind the leaders and the finishing order was much the same as the starting order: Ricciardo, Vette, Hamilton, Raikkonen, and Bottas. Verstappen was 9th. And so, with respect to points and championships, the status quo was essentially maintained. It is close!

June 10: GP of Canada (7)

Pirelli chose to supply the super-, ultra-, and hyper-soft tires for this 70 lap race around the very fast 2.7 mile circuit in Montreal, a speed-horsepower track that should favor the Mercedes and diminish the Red Bulls. Despite the northern clime, it was warm and sunny pretty much all weekend, and the fans turned out in droves. Not much of significance happened in any of the Practice sessions; most of the teams had revised doo-dads for their steeds, and were trying to sort their cars to accommodate them. Surprisingly, Verstappen in a Red bull was fastest in all three Practice sessions.

Grosjean suffered some sort of major engine failure in the first seconds of Q1 in his Haas-Ferrari and was out. He would start last. Subsequently, strategy and fakery dominated Q2. The Ferraris and Mercedes set their initial fast times on the longer lived ultra-soft tires, hoping that these times would be fast enough to get them through to Q3. Then, both Ferrari and Mercedes tried to fake each other out by coming out on the hyper-soft rubber at the very end of Q2. However, this was merely a ploy as both Ferrari and Mercedes aborted their last laps, choosing to start on the ultra-softs, and handily making it into Q3. With all trickery in the rear view mirror, Q3 was a mad dash for pole with everyone on the hyper-soft rubber. The starting order was a mixed bag: Vettel, Bottas, Verstappen, Hamilton, Raikkonen, and Ricciardo; under half a second covered the top 6. It is close.

The cars rolled to their grid positions with most of the cars (including the Red Bulls) on the faster hyper-soft tires, while the Mercedes and Ferraris were on the longer lived ultra-softs. Perhaps this assisted Ricciardo, who managed to pass Raikkonen in the first set of corners. Nothing could help Stroll (Williams) and Hartley (Toro Rosso), who collided and were out of the race almost before it began. The Safety Car came out for a short time, and racing resumed on lap 4. Then, things settled down and at lap 10 the running order was little changed: Vettel, Bottas, Verstappen, Hamilton, Ricciardo, and Raikkonen, with Vettel slowly pulling away from everyone. This essentially meant that Red Bulls’ strategy had failed. They could not move up the order on the faster tires, and would have to stop earlier as well.

The first pit stops of note were on laps 17 and 18, when both Red Bulls (on the hyper-soft tires) stopped. Numerous others who had started on the hyper-softs also stopped before lap 20. Hamilton, who was experiencing overheating, also stopped for tires at this time, but what he really needed was some bodywork modifications to help cool his engine. Raikkonen was the first of those who started on the ultra-soft tires to stop, but much later, on lap 33. Then Bottas and Vettel both stopped a few laps later. All the leaders chose the super soft tires, hoping they would be good to the end. At lap 40, after everyone had stopped at least once, the running order was Vettel, Bottas (6 seconds behind), Verstappen (6 seconds further back), Ricciardo, (5 seconds), Hamilton (2 seconds), and Raikkonen (3 seconds). So, it was pretty close at the front; from this point forward threats were mounted and rebuffed, but not much happened and the running order at the end remained unchanged.

So, this was a pretty uneventful race. Vettel finally won a race he clearly deserved to win. Red Bull’s variant strategy accomplished little if anything, and the Mercedes were never a serious threat on a track where they normally dominate. All of this bodes well for Ferrari’s hopes for a championship season. Overall, Vettel retakes the lead in the drivers’ championship, by one point over Hamilton. The constructors’ championship is also close: Mercedes 206, Ferrari 189, and Red Bull 134.

Meanwhile, back in the pack, rookie Charles LeClerc again drove well to finish 10th in his Sauber-Ferrari. The pundits have anointed him a future star, and rumor has him replacing Raikkonen at Ferrari next season.

June 24: GP of France (8)

After a 10 year absence, the GP circus returned to southern France and Circuit Paul Ricard; they were greeted with high heat and sweltering conditions that persisted throughout the weekend. Pirelli supplied the soft, super-soft, and ultra-soft tires for the 53 lap race around the 3.6 mile track, which looked spectacular, but which is known for wearing tires quickly.

The Mercedes (running their upgraded engines) were quickest in Practice with the Red Bulls close behind; the Ferraris were off the pace. The rains finally arrived on Saturday morning (before Qualifying), cooling the air but washing away the grip providing rubber build up from the track surface. As a result, despite attempts otherwise, none of the leaders was able to qualify on the soft tires. The Qualifying order would be Hamilton, Bottas, Vettel, Verstappen, Ricciardo, and Raikkonen, with the Mercedes and Red Bulls on the super-soft tires and the Ferraris on the faster but shorter lived ultra-softs. The situation looked bad for the Ferraris, who, like all the others, were planning only one stop.

As is becoming the norm, there was much contact in the first couple of turns. Bottas and Vettel were but two that came together; both stopped for new nose cones. In the process, they both also switched to the far more durable soft tires, hoping to go to the end without stopping again. When the Safety Car exited the track on lap 6 and racing resumed, the running order was Hamilton, Verstappen, Sainz (Renault), and Ricciardo, with Vettel (19th) and Bottas (20th) at the very back of the field. In response to the situation, Vettel went wild, driving like a demon and passing left, right, and center (well, maybe not center). By lap 10, he had jumped to 11th, and by lap 22 he was back up to 5th overall! Impressive! Unfortunately, these antics compromised his tires and he could no longer make much headway.

Verstappen was the first to make a scheduled stop for new tires (lap 26), with Ricciardo, and Hamilton following soon thereafter. All chose the soft tires. Raikkonen, however, delayed his stop several laps and chose to take a shot on the super-soft rubber. On lap 35, after all of the leaders had stopped once, the running order was Hamilton, Verstappen, Ricciardo, Vettel, Raikkonen, and Bottas, and it was a sprint to the end. Meanwhile, there was an inordinate amount of passing throughout the field, perhaps more than I have ever seen in a F1 race. These cars are closely matched, and they are fighting tooth-and-nails for points, and the money they bring. At the front, Raikkonen, on his faster and newer tires passed Vettel on lap 41 (at which point both Vettel and Bottas stopped for fresh tires), and then did the same to Ricciardo on lap 47. At the end of a most entertaining race the order was Hamilton, Verstappen, Raikkonen, Ricciardo, Vettel, Magnussen, and Bottas.

With this result, Hamilton reclaims the lead in the drivers’ championship by 14 points over Vettel (with Ricciardo, Bottas and Raikkonen not far behind) and Mercedes takes a 23 point lead over Ferrari in the constructors’ championship (with Red Bull not too far back). A close competition it is, and that makes for an exciting season.

July 1: GP of Austria (9)

The track in Austria is short (2.6 miles) and fast (lap times are just over a minute, giving an average speed of nearly 150 mph). Pirelli opted to supply the soft, super-soft, and ultra-soft rubber for the 71 lap race. It was cool and cloudy for Practice on Friday, and the ultra-soft tires responded by refusing to get to temperature; the soft tires were giving lap times nearly as fast. This put a big question mark over the data being gathered (both as to speed and tire life). In any case, two things seemed obvious: the Ferraris weren’t that fast, but their tires seemed to last longer than anyone else’s, and everyone was planning a one stop strategy.

All of that was interesting, but the real news that came out of Practice was that Red Bull has decided to use the Honda engines next year. On the surface, that is a bold move. But really Red Bull had no choice. Neither Ferrari nor Mercedes would supply engines to such a close competitor, and the engines Renault has been supplying to Red Bull are neither powerful nor reliable enough to consistently run out front, even when mounted in one of the very best chassis. This move is the first salvo in the war that will be the 2019 season.

Saturday Qualifying was also run in cool, cloudy conditions, meaning that no new information regarding tire wear or relative lap times could be gleaned. Mercedes decided to run Q2 (and therefore start the race) on the super-soft tires (indicating that they were not happy with their tire wear), while most of the others (including Ferrari and Red Bull) opted for the ultra-soft rubber. After everyone put in their best efforts in Q3, the starting order was set: Bottas, Hamilton, Vettel, Raikkonen, Verstappen, Grosjean (Haas), and Ricciardo, clearly a poor result for the Red Bulls.

Wow, what a difference a day makes. First, race day dawned clear and hot, and getting hotter by the hour. This meant that all data that had been collected was worthless and the plans made based on that data were now subject to change. And second, Vettel was penalized three grid spots for inadvertently blocking another car during Qualifying. He would start 6th.

When the lights went out, Raikkonen made a fabulous start and passed Bottas, whose start was marred by excessive wheel spin which allowed Hamilton to squeeze by as well. Unfortunately, Kimi was carrying too much speed into the initial turns and slid a bit, allowing Bottas (and Verstappen) to pass him back. In the end, Ferrari lost a spot, but it sure was exciting. At the end of lap 1 the running order was Hamilton, Bottas, Verstappen, Raikkonen, Ricciardo, and Vettel. Things then settled down a bit until lap 14, when Bottas experienced a gearbox failure and came to a stop at the side of the track. This brought on a Virtual Safety Car period during which most of the cars pitted for new tires, with everyone mounting the softs, hoping they would last to the end. Race leader Hamilton, however, missed this opportunity to pit due to a snafu by his strategy team, and he was suddenly on a different strategy than everyone else. Shortly thereafter, Ricciardo, on a charge, managed to pass Raikkonen on lap 20.

Hamilton, slowing down on worn tires and being caught by his pursuers, finally made his pit stop on lap 26 (15 laps later than the others) and rejoined in 4th place. The running order was Verstappen, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, Hamilton (all pretty much nose to tail), and Vettel. To me it seemed Hamilton had the advantage because he was only about 10 seconds behind the leader and was on much newer tires than everyone else. If he took his time, he could pick off the cars ahead and win. Instead, Hamilton berated his team over the radio for the pit stop snafu, and proceeded to try to force his way past Raikkonen with no regard for the life of his tires. At about this point, an unpleasant realization hit the teams: the hot weather was bad for tire life and it was unlikely that the soft tires most had mounted on lap 11 would make it to the end. Instead, they were beginning to show serious degradation on only lap 30. Ricciardo’s tires were the first to blister, perhaps because of his charge to pass Raikkonen many laps earlier, and he began to slow significantly and then made a second stop on lap 38, opting for the super-soft rubber. Hamilton was next to experience tire woes (surprising since his tires were virtually new), likely the result of his antics in trying to pass Raikkonen. He had to slow down and was summarily passed by Vettel. The next to experience tire woes was the leader, Verstappen. But his degradation was mitigated because, as leader, he was always running in clean air and was never attempting to pass a contending car. What was clear was this: the Ferraris, as hinted in Practice, were far more gentle on their tires than the other front runners. They alone had managed to post decent lap times without blistering their rubber. But, by about lap 50 (when the running order was Verstappen, Raikkonen, Vettel, Hamilton, and Ricciardo), everyone, including the Ferraris, was experiencing significant tire degradation and another pit stop seemed in the cards.

In fact, Hamilton stopped again on lap 53, just as Ricciardo experienced an engine problem and dropped out. Meanwhile, Raikkonen was now catching race leader Verstappen, Vettel was catching Raikkonen, and Hamilton (on fresh rubber) was catching everyone. It was tense because the Ferraris were walking a fine line – they had the speed to catch Verstappen (whose tires were shot), but if they used that speed their tires might not make it to the end of the race. Then, on lap 63, Hamilton experienced an engine failure and dropped out of the race. With this, everyone relaxed a bit and cruised to the end. The finishing order was Verstappen, Raikkonen, Vettel, and Grosjean and Magnussen (both in the Ferrari powered Haas cars).

F1 Recap (January through June 2018 – Races 1 – 9

With the season nearly half complete, we can draw some conclusions:

The performance of the top three teams, Ferrari, Red Bull, and Mercedes-Benz, is very close, and significantly better than the rest of the field. Any of these cars can win at any time.

The performance of the rest of the field is very close as well.

Individual tracks favor individual cars.

Tires, and relative tire wear, are of great significance. The Mercedes seem to be harder on their tires than the Ferraris and Red Bulls. With performance being about equal, tire management may decide both championships.

After 9 races, the standings look like this.

Top Constructors Top Drivers

Ferrari 247 Vettel (F) 146 Ricciardo (R-B) 96
Mercedes 237 Hamilton (M-B) 145 Verstappen (R-B) 93
Red Bull 189 Raikkonen (F) 101 Bottas (M-B) 92

Yes, it is THAT close. This spells exciting racing ahead. Be sure to watch, at home on ESPN or at Siena with the rabid Ferrari fans, and that good Italian food.

Meanwhile, back in the pack…Force India has fallen from ‘best-of-the-rest’ to just average. They have 28 points…McLaren switched engines (from Honda to Renault) but they still languish near the back of the field. They have scored 40 points, but that is mostly due to the brilliance of Fernando Alonso, who has tallied 32 of them…The Haas cars (our American team!!) have been competitive, but have made so many mistakes (most notably the wheel nut SNAFU) that they have little to show for it. They have scored 27 points, but should have many more.

Looking at the new drivers, Pierre Gasly (who has scored 18 points in a Toro Rosso) and Charles LeClerc (11 points in a Sauber) must be lauded for making lemonade from their lemons. Meanwhile, our old buddy ‘Crash’ Verstappen deserves a mention. This guy is ungodly fast and bold, and his car control is sometimes astonishing, but he often shoots himself in the foot with idiotic maneuvers. He should have many more points than he does, which must anger Red Bull to no end. But, like a train wreck, he sure is exciting to watch.

So, enough of the past 6 months. Forward we go – the future awaits.

John Ratto

The Ratto Report – FCLV 2017 Biannual Review 2

The Ratto Report
FCLV 2017 Biannual Review 2

stick

Opening Commentary

We open the second half of 2017 in much the same circumstances as we opened the start of the year: What the heck is going on in Washington and will any of it amount to more than a hill of beans. The country, and really the whole world, is awaiting the verdict with bated breath.

With the failure to repeal Obamacare in rear-view mirror, and the strong possibility for tax reform immediately ahead, the verdict on the Trump presidency is far from being determined, especially with allegations still pending regarding Russian meddling in the election. Nevertheless, the stock market is still afire, setting new highs seemingly every other day. Someone or something must be going the right thing. And, given all of the new wealth being created and the general optimism in the business community, it should come as no surprise that the market for both new and used Ferraris remains relatively strong.

With that in mind, here is a recap of what transpired in the second half of 2017. We sincerely hope you can attend at least a few events over the next few months, and don’t forget to visit our NEW! IMPROVED! website at ferrariclubvegas.com.

July 11: Board Meeting at Bravo Italian at the Galleria Mall

More than half of the Board attended, so the turnout had to be considered a success especially since one member is recently deceased. Our financial situation was discussed briefly, with a very slight increase in the bottom line noted. The addition of a new member, Larz McAdoo (wife Diane), was also acknowledged. Please be sure to greet these two warmly when meeting them so they may feel welcome. A memorial for Rocky LaBriola (our deceased Board member) was then discussed without any definite action planned. Other than that, the subject matter was the same as it has been for the previous several meetings: creating and selling merchandise to generate income, future drives and other events, the holiday party, and the progress of the Website, which is mostly complete and ready to be used. The next Board meeting was scheduled for September 19th at the home of Ted and Arlene Schlazer. The terms of several Board members will be expiring soon…we welcome all members to run for these positions.

September 19: Board Meeting at home of Ted and Arlene Schlazer

The usual suspects gathered at the home of Ted and Arlene Schlazer to map out plans for the remainder of the year. It was decided that we would accept the kind offer of Towbin Motorcars (our dealership) to host the Holiday Party on December 2 in their new showroom. Other issues were then discussed, including plans for a Club booth at the upcoming Siena Italian car show on October 8. Finally, a slate of upcoming socials was agreed upon, and a date (11/14) was set for the next Board meeting, allowing the wining and dining to begin. The Board and the Club thank Ted and Arlene for their kind hospitality.

September 28: Social at Siena Italian Trattoria

It was a beautiful Vegas evening, and it brought out a large turnout (both in members, over 20, which required deploying an additional table in the banquet room) and Ferraris (I spotted 6 in the parking lot). We also had the pleasure of welcoming several newcomers (including Burton and Ann Weast, among others) to the fold. The food was very good, as usual, and the conversation was animated, much of it centering on the trips several members recently made to Monterey Car Week. All-in-all, it was a very pleasant evening.

October 1: Mass Shootings on the Strip

This was truly ‘a day that will live in infamy.’ It seems incomprehensible that one crazy person could cause such carnage in less than 15 minutes. We all mourn the victims and pray for their families, and hope that such insanity will never happen again.

October 8: Italian Sports Car and Motorcycle Day at Siena Trattoria

Well, this was the 8th annual (my, time does fly by) and it was perhaps the best ever…even though injury forced me to leave my car at home. We again thank Antonio and his crew, led by Kumiko, for making it happen so smoothly. Of note was that our Ferrari Club of America Chapter had its own little booth with logo polo shirts for sale (nice ones!), all for the first time. Thanks to Chuck and Kerrie for making that all happen.

October 26: Social at Bravo Italian at the Galleria Mall

Despite its proximity to Halloween, we had an excellent turnout for this get-together at a venue that most of our members had never been to. It was a simply outstanding fall Las Vegas evening, so we started out with libations on the restaurant’s welcoming covered patio. After moving inside for the main course, the restaurant proved to be very hospitable, assigning our group a nice section of the premises, and the food was praised by all. During the post dinner conversations, I especially liked hearing about Paul and Shawna Hesselgesser’s trip to Italy for Ferrari’s 70th anniversary party; it sounded like a blast.

November 14: Board Meeting at Dean’s Place

Wow! It is really getting dark early! Despite the seemingly midnight hour, 5 members of your Board rousted themselves to Dean’s Place near the Silverton for a meeting. The usual issues were discussed, including financials, the web site, and branded clothing items for sale. We also went through a short list of members who have not renewed; they will be dealt with appropriately. Finally, we got to the good stuff, including special access to the upcoming Mecum Auction for our members and the Holiday Party scheduled for December 2. And lastly, the next Board meeting was scheduled for January 16 at the home of Elda and Dave Fanucchi.

December 2: Annual Holiday Party at Towbin Motorcars (our dealership)

It was a great night. Nearly 30 members and guests turned out in their evening finery, and Towbin’s new, exclusively Ferrari showroom (have you checked it out yet?) looked spectacular. Oh, did I forget to mention that there were some extremely desirable baubles (I’m asking Santa for the white 599 GTB Fiorano) strewn about to stimulate our saliva glands, perhaps in preparation for the dinner to come. And what a fine dinner it was, with a menu fashioned after the famous Montana Restaurant located in Modena just outside the factory walls, the food was praised be everyone. Did I forget to mention that the cocktails and wine were served graciously at an open bar? All-in-all, it was one of our finest Holiday parties and we thank the dealership and the Towbins for providing the venue and the delicious cibo (that would be Italian for food)…and for making it a special evening. T-was a grand kick-off to the Holidays I would say.

UPCOMING EVENTS

Socials will resume in January, after the hubbub of the holidays has subsided, and everyone’s wallet has somewhat recovered. The new year and warmer weather in March should also mean some drives, including hopefully several to some new locations. The next Board meeting is scheduled for January 16. Meanwhile, be sure to visit our new website for the latest information. FerrariClubVegas.com

FORMULA 1 NEWS RECAP

Overview of the F1 season as of July 2017

This is one of the best seasons in recent memory. All of you so called Ferrari aficionados should be watching every race because this really is ‘must see TV.’

We begin July with 8 races (nearly half of the season) completed, and the competition is very, very close. Mercedes leads Ferrari by 250 points to 226 in the constructors’ standings, with Red Bull (137) and Force India (yea for the underdogs – 79) the best of the rest. Meanwhile, Sebastian Vettel (Ferrari!) leads Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) by 153 points to 139 in the drivers’ championship, with Valtteri Bottas (111 – Mercedes), Daniel Ricciardo (92 – Red Bull), and Kimi Raikkonen (73 – Ferrari) trailing.

What makes this season special is that the cars are so competitive. The front runners are evenly matched, and they aren’t that much faster than the cars in the middle of the pack. This makes for exciting racing. When the leaders pit and return in the mid-field, they find it difficult to pass the cars ahead which leads to drama, uncertainty, and hard fought battles. Yes, the races have all been won by either Red Bulls, Mercedes Benzes, or Ferraris, but that is certainly better than previous years when M-B dominated by winning virtually every race. This year, races start with the possibility of 5 teams (the top three plus Force India and Williams) winning, or at least being on the podium.

As far as the young drivers go, my opinion of Esteban Ocon (Force India) remains the same – this is a future star. He is quick and poised, and seldom makes errors. One of the top teams will snatch him quickly once his contract has been fulfilled. Meanwhile, Lance Stroll (Williams) has proved a surprise. He seemed lost the first 5-6 races, and headed for an early termination of his career in the big time. Then, he turned things around in Canada and is suddenly a new man, and driving expertly. Congratulations, your future looks good. Max Verstappen, last year’s top youngster, has been somewhat of a disappointment this year, mainly because his bar has been set so high. Last year everything went well for him. When he tried an audacious pass, he squeezed by and the move was a success. The car seemed unbreakable. This year, things are different. When Max tries those crazy passes, he comes into contact with the other car. His own car has shown a propensity to fail him. How will he handle adversity? At the other end of the spectrum, Palmer, Vandoorne, Wehrlein, and Ericsson haven’t shown much, meaning that there may be a slew of empty seats for next season.

As of July, it looked as if it would be a real battle to the end. Finally, a truly exciting and competitive season, with Ferrari smack dab in the middle of the fray. So, let’s see how it played out.

July through November: F1 Viewing at Siena and other venues

July 9: GP of Austria (9)

The hot subject during Practice was the continued and obvious bad blood between Vettel and Hamilton over the safety car period shenanigans that transpired two weeks earlier at Azerbaijan. In the end, Vettel (under duress) apologized to all, and Hamilton managed to look like the total innocent. Yeah, right. The good news was that no further penalties were assessed. The even better news is that this sets up a contentious battle between the top two drivers throughout the remainder of the season.

At 2.7 miles, this is a short, quick circuit, with fast laps at just over 1 minute. Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 71 lap race. Qualifying was uneventful until the last few minutes, when Grosjean’s Haas stalled on track and effectively ruined everyone else’s quickest laps. In the end, Bottas and Vettel were quickest, and Hamilton (4th quickest on the super-soft tires while everyone else was on the faster ultra-softs) was assessed a 5 grid spot penalty for changing out his transmission. After Qualifying, the commentator asked for a camera-opportunity moment Hamilton-Vettel handshake to show everything was ‘cool’ between the two championship leaders; Hamilton refused. Ouch. Given Hamilton’s penalty, the grid was Bottas, Vettel (about 5 hundreds of a second behind), Raikkonen, Ricciardo, Verstappen, Grosjean (a surprisingly good result from the Haas driver), Perez (Force India), Hamilton, and Ocon (force India).

Verstappen made a terrible start (clutch failure) leading to several minor collisions as the other cars tried to pass him before entering the first turn. While Sainz and Kvyat suffered some damage, Verstappen and Alonso were forced to retire. At the end of an eventful lap one, the leaders were Bottas, Vettel, Ricciardo, Grosjean, and Raikkonen, who quickly dispatched the Hass ahead and began to run down Ricciardo. Meanwhile, Hamilton was doing his thing and by lap 10 the order was Bottas, Vettel, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, and Hamilton. This running order then went unchanged for many laps. The weatherman was calling for rain before the end of the race, so everyone was doing their best to get as many laps out of their original tires as possible. No one wanted to pit for fresh rubber and then be forced to pit again a few laps later for rain tires. This resulted in a relatively boring stretch of racing. Around lap 35, when the rain failed to materialize, the drivers (except Bottas and Raikkonen, who soldiered on) began to stop for fresh rubber. Bottas finally changed tires on lap 41, while Raikkonen (for team strategy reasons) pushed on to lap 46. On lap 48, when the dust had settled, the running order remained relatively unchanged: Bottas, Vettel, Ricciardo, Hamilton, and Raikkonen.

With the rain out of the picture, everyone got down to the business of serious racing. Vettel, who was about 4 seconds behind the leader, began to slowly reel in Bottas. Hamilton was doing the same to Ricciardo. And, everyone was complaining of tire degradation. What had been a dull race was suddenly looking very interesting. By lap 68, Vettel was on Bottas’ tail, and Hamilton was immediately behind Ricciardo. This led to several attempted and failed passes, and some exciting action. But, in the end, not much changed. The final result was Bottas, Vettel (less than a half second behind), Ricciardo, Hamilton, Raikkonen (who had to slow down due to car problems), Grosjean (an excellent result for Haas), Perez, and Ocon.

July 16: GP of England (10)

Is this England? Must be! It was cloudy, cool, and damp all weekend. Pirelli supplied the super-soft, soft, and medium tires for the 52 lap race on the ultra-fast Silverstone circuit, where the top guys were AVERAGING over 150 mph and experiencing up to 6 lateral Gs on some of the corners (this is astronaut stuff people). Qualifying started in wet conditions, with most on the intermediate-wet tires. As the session progressed, though, the sun came out and the track dried; by Q3 everyone was running on race rubber and near the max. When it was over, the sharp end of the grid was Hamilton, Raikkonen, Vettel, Verstappen, Hulkenberg (Renault). Bottas was relegated to 9th after a penalty for changing his transmission while Ricciardo suffered car problems and was forced to start at the very rear of the field. These two started on the soft tires, while the other top cars opted for the super-softs.

Verstappen made an exceptional start, jumping past Vettel for 3rd in the first hundred yards. Meanwhile, back in the field the inevitable first corner collision damaged or eliminated a slew of the mid-field and brought out the safety car, which exited on lap 5 with the running order Hamilton, Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Vettel. Bottas, who had started 9th, was up to 5th by lap 8. Vettel was the first to pit for new tires (lap 18) followed immediately by Verstappen. Hamilton, however, delayed his first stop to lap 26, while Bottas, who had started on the on the soft (harder) tires managed to go until lap 33; he reentered in 4th place and on the preferred super-soft tires and looked to be in the cat-bird seat for an excellent result. The running order was Hamilton, Raikkonen, Vettel, Bottas, Verstappen, and Ricciardo who had worked his way through the field from last. By lap 44 Bottas had passed Vettel for 3rd, but seemed too far behind second place Raikkonen to mount any serious threat in the few laps remaining.

Then, disaster struck Ferrari. Raikkonen’s left front tire disintegrated and he was forced to pit for new rubber on the second to last lap while Bottas sailed by into second place. Then, disaster struck again. Vettel also experienced a tire failure (last lap) which forced him to also pit for new rubber. So, in the end, when all was said and done, the finishing order was Hamilton, Bottas, Raikkonen, Verstappen, Ricciardo, Hulkenberg, and Vettel.

You had to shed a tear for Ferrari. A race that had started well and had then progressed nicely was suddenly turned into a catastrophe…for both cars. Better luck in Hungary; it can’t get much worse than this.

July 30: GP of Hungary (11)

This short, twisty track should favor the Ferraris, and it did as the Qualifying order was Vettel, Raikkonen, Bottas, Hamilton, Verstappen, and Ricciardo. The track also proved to the liking of the McLarens; both were in the top 10. Pirelli supplied the super-soft (everyone qualified and started on these), soft, and medium tires for the 70 lap race.

Race day was clear and warm, but the inevitable crashes on the first lap happened anyway. Red Bull teammates Riccardo and Verstappen came together in the first corner (it looked to be Verstappen’s fault and he was ultimately given a 10 second penalty); Verstappen was able to continue while Ricciardo was out after less than 20 seconds of racing. Hulkenberg bumped Grosjean as well, and the safety car was deployed until lap 6, when racing resumed with the order Vettel, Raikkonen, Bottas, Verstappen, and Hamilton. On lap 28, with Vettel and Raikkonen circling comfortably in the lead, Vettel began to experience steering/suspension problems; his lap times slowed down a bit and suddenly the outcome was in doubt. Most of the leaders stopped for tires (all switched to the softs) between laps 30 and 33. During his stop, the Ferrari mechanics quickly determined that Vettel’s car could not be repaired and would need to continue in its current condition.

By lap 35, Verstappen (the sole driver near the front who had not stopped) was comfortably ahead, while Raikkonen, Bottas, and Hamilton were jammed up behind Vettel in second place, who was struggling with his car but still setting competitive lap times. Verstappen finally stopped for new rubber on lap 44, when he also served his 10 second penalty. By this time, all of the leaders were frustrated with following Vettel at a slightly reduced speed: Raikkonen was complaining on his radio, while Hamilton clearly wanted to get by Bottas so he could have a shot at passing the two Ferraris. On lap 46, Bottas, who was also having some mechanical issues, stepped aside and let his teammate by to try his luck. Ferrari command, on the other hand, instructed Raikkonen to stay where he was, hinting he should block any attempt by Hamilton to pass. This led to a series of laps with Hamilton trying to get by Raikkonen for second place, and being unable to do so. It was very tense until Hamilton began to experience brake issues, probably caused by following Raikkonen too closely, and was forced to drop back a bit. So it went to the end, when, in a sporting gesture, Hamilton handed 3rd place back to Bottas in recompense for having allowed him to pass earlier. The final finishing order was Vettel, Raikkonen, Bottas, Hamilton, and Verstappen.

So, the racing Gods give, and they take away. After experiencing rotten luck in England, Ferrari was lucky in Hungary. Also of note, both McLarens finished in the top 10, and Fernando Alonso did the fastest lap of the Hungarian GP. Is it possible that the comatose monster has awakened? We’ll have to wait until late August, after the summer break, to see, and to learn how this most interesting season plays out. It is VERY close.

August 27: GP of Belgium at SPA (12)

With the summer break in the rear view mirror, the teams headed to Belgium and the famous SPA-Francorchamps circuit, home of the majestic and daunting corner known as Eau Rouge, where the drivers were experiencing 5 Gs of lateral loading and 3 Gs of vertical loading…simultaneously! Not only is SPA challenging, but is also long at 4.5 miles. Hence, only 44 laps would be run. Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires.

Practice and Qualifying saw huge crowds under overcast skies; but only a stray drop of rain fell the entire weekend, a huge surprise. The big news pertaining to Ferrari was that both Vettel (3 years) and Raikkonen (1 year) had extended their contracts with the Scuderia. Once again, the cars were averaging nearly 150 mph. With everyone starting on the ultra-soft tires, the grid order after Qualifying was quite familiar: Hamilton (who tied Michael Schumacher for most pole positions ever), Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Ricciardo.

Vettel and Hamilton both made good starts and barreled up the eau rouge hill side-by-side, with Hamilton managing to hold the lead. This seemed to be the order of the day, as there were many challenges, but few passes were made. When things settled down on lap 8, Verstappen suffered engine problems and came to a halt on the track. Raikkonen apparently ignored the resulting yellow flag, and was given a 10 second stop-and-go penalty, which essentially dashed his hopes of a podium finish. Pit stops began on lap 12, with many of the drivers (including Vettel and Hamilton) going to the soft (hardest available) tires, indicating that they planned no more stops. These stops let Raikkonen, who had not stopped, move to the lead, until Hamilton passed him on lap 17 with an absolutely stunning and daring move that had to be seen to be believed. Raikkonen then stopped for tires and to serve his penalty, and the race settled into a period of relative calm, except for the two Force Indias duking it out lap after lap. The bad blood between these teammates ultimately spilled over and they collided (lap 30), scattering debris over the track and bringing out the safety car for a long period. Naturally, everyone stopped for fresh tires, but the choices were surprising: Hamilton opted for a fresh set of softs, while Vettel chose ultra-softs. This set up a most interesting sprint to the finish, when racing resumed on lap 33. Vettel challenged Hamilton on the re-start, but just failed to make the pass stick and Hamilton managed to hold the lead. Meanwhile, further back, all the drivers were giving it their all to move toward the front, with Raikkonen and Ricciardo going three wide to both pass Bottas simultaneously in another particularly daring move. At the front, Vettel closed up on Hamilton several times as the laps dwindled away, but was never able to mount a serious threat for the lead, giving a final finishing order of Hamilton, Vettel, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, and Bottas.

September 3: GP on Italy at Monza (13)

During Practice, it was made known that both Red Bulls had been assessed a 5 place grid penalty for changing their engines. Monza is another high speed, low downforce circuit that would likely favor the Mercedes cars, but in Practice the Ferraris were close on their heels. Pirelli supplied the super-soft, soft, and medium tires (along with the wets) for the 53 lap race. Everyone of note, except Red Bull’s Ricciardo (who was mired at 17th on grid), qualified on the super-softs; Ricciardo instead opted for the softs.

Qualifying was greeted with heavy rains that severely delayed proceedings. Once it resumed and ended, the results were startling: Hamilton, Stroll (Williams), Ocon (Force India), Bottas, Raikkonen, Vettel, Massa (Williams), and Kvyat (Toro Rosso).

After lots of dicing and some passing in the first few laps, the running order was Hamilton, Ocon, Stroll, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Vettel. Soon thereafter, both Bottas and Vettel passed both Stroll and Ocon, and the M-Bs were running out front with a Ferrari on their tails. A few laps later, Verstappen (with his streak of bad luck continuing) collided with Massa and suffered a puncture that forced him to the back of the pack. Meanwhile, Ricciardo (Verstappen’s teammate) was working his way up the field while Hamilton was slowly pulling away from those chasing him. While Raikkonen and Stroll opted for early pit stops (between laps 15 and 20), most of the leaders delayed their stops until after lap 30 (and Ricciardo, who had started on the more durable soft tires, to lap 38); this was a period of many passes and jockeying for position in the mid-field, and it made for some exciting racing. After that, the leaders maintained order to the end, with the final tally showing Hamilton (who takes the points lead), Bottas, Vettel, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, Ocon, and Stroll. This was a disappointing finish for Ferrari in front of the enthusiastic home fans.

September 17: GP of Singapore

This curvy, twisty track should favor the Ferraris and the Red Bulls, and be unfavorable to the M-Bs. But, during practice, the Ferraris were off the pace and did not look competitive; meanwhile the Red Bulls were at the top of the charts. Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 61 lap race to be run at night to avoid the sweltering weather of the day. In other news, McLaren announced it would shift to the Renault engines (from Honda) for the 2018 season. During Qualifying, the Ferraris suddenly found pace and challenged for the best times. Vettel said, “The car simply came alive.” Perhaps they had been sandbagging a bit in Practice? In any case, the starting order was Vettel, Verstappen, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, Hamilton, and Bottas – a nice change of pace.

The skies threw a monkey wrench into things when it began to rain a few minutes before race time. Vettel and a few of the other front runners opted to start on the intermediate tires rather than the slicks, and the race began on schedule and as planned. That lasted for about 100 feet: Raikkonen made an amazing start from 4th, and was immediately beside (and outside) and then a bit ahead of Verstappen, while Vettel, who started poorly, cut across the track to block Verstappen into the first turn. So you had Raikkonen on the far outside, Verstappen right next to him, and Vettel moving towards them – 3 cars fighting for space on less than half the track. Collision…all three were out. Meanwhile, Hamilton calmly motored by on the deserted other half of the track to take the lead with Ricciardo close behind. All the carnage brought out the safety car and by lap 7 the running order had settled down to a rather strange Hamilton, Ricciardo, Hulkenberg, Perez, Palmer, and Bottas; all on wet tires. But the rain was slowly abating, and by lap 20 the boldest were switching to dry tires. By lap 30 all had done so, and on lap 35 the running order was Hamilton, Ricciardo, Bottas, Hulkenberg, and Sainz. Not much happened from then until the end, with Hamilton taking the victory.

This result is a disaster for Ferrari. Both Vettel and the team scored zero points in a race they should have won. It may be the end of Ferrari’s and Vettel’s dreams for a championship in 2017.

October 1: GP of Malaysia

This track features many tight turns and two long straights. As such, the general opinion was that it really did not favor any of the cars. The Red Bulls and the Ferraris were quickest in Practice, so there was hope in the red garage. Pirelli supplied the super-soft, soft, and medium tires for 56 lap race.

Vettel changed his engine after Friday Practice, and experienced problems when he attempted to qualify. When the problems persisted, he failed to set a time in Q3 and was relegated to starting the race from last place…one more arrow in the quiver of Ferrari bad luck. With nearly everyone (except notably Vettel on the softs) qualifying (and therefore starting) on the super-soft rubber, the order was Hamilton, Raikkonen, Verstappen, Ricciardo, and Bottas.

To add insult to injury, Raikkonen experienced engine problems on the installation lap and did not participate in the race. This left Hamilton and Verstappen to battle for the lead, with Hamilton taking it through the first laps. Bottas made the best start of all and was quickly up to third. Meanwhile, Vettel had the bit between his teeth and was up to 12th (from 20th) by the end of lap 2. Then, something unusual happened. On lap 4 Verstappen simply motored by Hamilton to take the lead. And, just behind the leaders, Ricciardo was pressing Bottas very hard for third. So, with all this action at the front, this was really good racing. By lap 10, Ricciardo had passed Bottas for third, and Vettel had made his way into the top 10. He was 7th on lap 13, when the first tire stops were made, and Vettel was 5th by lap 25, and on Bottas’ rear bumper. But Vettel simply could not pass the more powerful Mercedes, which seemed to be deliberately holding up the Ferrari’s progress, to the benefit of Hamilton and Ricciardo who were not much farther up the road. This led to all of the leaders stopping for tires in the next few laps. Vettel naturally switched to the super-soft tires, and looked to have the advantage in the remaining laps because everyone else of note was forced to take on the soft rubber. So, at lap 30 the order was Verstappen, Hamilton, Ricciardo, Vettel (who had finally found a way past the Mercedes), and Bottas; an exciting sprint to the finish seemed to be in the offing. Unfortunately, despite much effort exerted, neither Ricciardo nor Vettel was able to pass the Mercedes ahead of them and that order prevailed to the end.

This was another major lost opportunity for Ferrari. The way Vettel ran during the race suggested the very real possibility of a Ferrari one-two if the gods of fate had been smiling on the red team.

October 8: GP of Japan

Pirelli supplied the super-soft, soft, and medium tires for the 53 lap race. Heavy rains seriously affected the practice sessions, leaving all the teams scrambling to find the right settings for their cars. Some teams were more busy rebuilding cars that had crashed in the heavy weather. All of this combined with grid spot penalties galore meant that the starting order was a bit different than the actual qualifying times might have produced: Hamilton, Vettel, Ricciardo, Verstappen, and Ocon. Bottas’ rebuilt car was penalized to 6th, Raikkonen’s to 10th: both would start on the soft tires while everyone else of note was on the super-soft rubber.

By race time, the weather had turned sunny and quite warm, calling into question whatever vehicle setup had been performed previously. The start was uneventful, but less than a lap into the race it became obvious that Vettel was having engine problems; he retired shortly thereafter. Meanwhile, Raikkonen, trying valiantly to move up, went off road and lost several spots instead. He was running 14th on lap 5. However, by lap 20, the running order was Hamilton, Verstappen, Ricciardo, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Ocon. On lap 21 Ocon was the first to stop for fresh tires, followed closely thereafter by Hamilton, Verstappen, and most of the others. They all switched to the mandatory soft rubber. Raikkonen and Bottas, who had started on the soft tires, delayed their stops to laps 29 and 32 respectively, and switched to the super-softs. The closing laps were exciting, with Verstappen challenging Hamilton for the lead, and Bottas challenging Ricciardo for third. But, in the end no one was able to make a pass stick and the finishing order was the same as that indicated at lap 20.

So, it was another disaster for the boys Marenello. Hopes for a championship in 2017 are gone. Wait until next year.

October 22: GP of the United States

The weather for Free Practice 1 on Friday was cool and misty, leading to a damp track and a lot of slipping and sliding, even on the intermediate wet tires. The big news in the pits was that Verstappen had extended his contract with Red Bull, and that Alonso had done the same with McLaren. The weather improved as the day progressed, but Vettel still managed to spin in FP2, and thereby lose a lot off valuable laps for car set-up. During FP3 on Saturday morning, heavy winds combined with undulations in the track had the cars searching for grip and good lap times. After all of that, Qualifying seemed almost boring: Hamilton, Vettel, Bottas, Ricciardo, and Raikkonen. Verstappen was penalized to 17th for an engine swap.

Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 56 lap race; everyone chose the ultra-softs except Verstappen, who, starting 17th, opted for the softs.

Boxing announcer Michael Buffer was brought on to introduce the drivers and generally put a Texas-sized level of bombast to the proceedings. No one confused this with Monaco, that’s for sure. But all looked rosy when Vettel jumped Hamilton at the start and managed to hold the race lead at the end of lap 1. The first 5 or so laps were ultra-exciting, with Bottas and Ricciardo fighting side-by-side for long stretches for third place, Raikkonen dueling with Ocon, and Verstappen coming up fast through the field thanks to some audacious passes of slower traffic. But, then the inevitable happened, Hamilton, with the advantage of DRS, squeezed by Vettel on lap 6 for the lead, and slowly began to pull away from the Ferrari. Nonetheless, the exciting racing continued with a tight duel between Raikkonen and Ricciardo, who eventually dropped out with engine issues. Most of the leaders made their first tire stops between laps 17 (Vettel) and 27, when the running order was Hamilton, Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Verstappen. Second stops were made between laps 34 and 46. During this period, more exciting racing was the order of the day, as Sainz (Renault) and Perez (Force India) went wheel-to-wheel repeatedly while fighting for position, and Raikkonen managed to snatch third from Bottas (who pitted for tires shortly thereafter). Then, on lap 51, after his second stop, Vettel made a simply astonishing pass on Bottas to regain second. On the last lap Verstappen made an audacious pass of Raikkonen that the stewards deemed a bit too audacious; they awarded Verstappen a 5 second penalty which made the finishing order Hamilton, Vettel, Raikkonen, and Verstappen. This was an excellent race and a very good result for Ferrari, especially after the disappointments of the previous three contests. But, in the end, Hamilton managed to win again.

October 29: GP of Mexico

The little used track was dusty during the practice sessions, providing little grip and eliciting many spins and slides. Moreover, the cars were clearly a bit down on both power and downforce due to the elevation (7,000 + feet) and resulting thin air. The cool, cloudy weather only exacerbated these issues, which continued into Qualifying on Saturday, when the crowds (in support of local here Sergio Perez) were huge. During Qualifying, fast lap jumped from driver to driver, with many temporarily at the top of the timing chart. But, in the end it was Vettel who reigned supreme with a picture perfect lap. The starting order was Vettel, Verstappen, Hamilton, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Ocon. Ricciardo was penalized to 16th for an engine change.

Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 71 lap race. Everyone at the front started on the ultra-soft rubber.

After a poignant moment of silence for the victims of the recent Mexican earthquake, the cars rolled off. Both Verstappen and Hamilton pushed the issue a bit too far at turn one…and the requisite collisions ensued. After the three top qualifiers bumped one another a few times, Hamilton had a punctured tire, Vettel had a damaged nose, and Verstappen, relatively unscathed, had the lead. He then proceeded to run off into the distance, and remain there for essentially the entire race. Meanwhile, Ricciardo dropped out and Hamilton and Vettel were in the pits, and then at the back of the pack. As the race played out, Vettel was on a charge to the front (in part, with a brutal pass of Massa on lap 13 for 15th place) while Hamilton made little such headway. The first stops were made on lap 20, and second stops were generally made on lap 33 when the safety car slowed the field. After the dust had settled, the running order was Verstappen, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Ocon; Vettel was 8th and Hamilton 16th. By lap 52, Vettel, with a series of fast laps, had clawed his way to 6th, and then to 5th by lap 55, and 4th by lap 58. But that was the extent of it; the final finishing order was Verstappen (the only Renault powered car – of 6 – that finished), Bottas, Raikkonen, Vettel, Ocon, Stroll, and Perez.

With this result, poor Vettel is once again cheated of a potential win, and Hamilton captures his 4th world championship. The first race of 2018 is in March…set your clocks.

November 12: GP of Brazil

Meanwhile, before March 2018, there are two more races to be run in 2017, and the first was at Interlagos in Sao Paulo, Brazil (population about 21 million). Pirelli supplied the super-soft, soft, and medium (no one liked these) tires for the 71 lap race. The Practice sessions saw the top 10 cars posting very competitive times, but cool, damp, misty conditions scrambled things up in Qualifying, when Hamilton spun in Q1, damaged his car, and was relegated to starting the race from pit lane. Ricciardo, who suffered an engine change penalty, was moved back to 14th. Both of them would start on the soft tires, while everyone else was on the super-soft rubber. As the weather got worse, times got slower and the final starting order was Bottas, Vettel, Raikkonen, Verstappen, Perez, and Alonso.

Race day was sunny and hot, quite different than the Qualifying conditions, a distinct advantage to Hamilton whose pit crew was free to change the settings on his car overnight as he was starting in pit lane. Bottas made a good start, but Vettel made a better one and pushed past the Finn to take the lead at turn 1. He managed to make it stick without any contact, but there was plenty of that in the field behind the leaders. By lap 10, when the dust had settled and the safety car was back in the pits, the running order was Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, Verstappen and Massa. Hamilton was moving up fast (he was 10th, and then 7th by lap 15, and 5th by lap 22) while Ricciardo was still mired in 14th. Tire stops began on lap 28, with all the leaders switching to the soft rubber. There was a close moment when Vettel reentered side-by-side with Bottas, but the Ferrari took control and then managed to slowly eke out a lead over the Mercedes. Hamilton and Ricciardo, who had both started on the soft tires, delayed their pit stops to lap 44, with both switching to the super-soft rubber. So, on lap 45 the running order was Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Hamilton (who, on the fresher and stickier rubber, was catching everyone ahead). He passed Verstappen on lap 60, and then mounted an assault against Raikkonen, who fought him tooth-and-nail for the final spot on the podium. In the end, Raikkonen prevailed and the final finish was Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, Hamilton, Verstappen, and Ricciardo.

This was an excellent result for Ferrari, but it was too little and too late.

November 26: GP of Abu Dhabi

A night race at a spectacular venue located in an exotic locale…what more could you ask for? How about some action? Qualifying went to script except that Bottas claimed pole over Hamilton, with Vettel, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, and Verstappen following. In other words, the big 6 were in lock-step. Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 55 lapper, and all of the top qualifiers opted for the ultras; no surprise there.

It was a clean charge to the first corners with the leaders holding positions and, despite some challenges in the mid-field, nary a collision to spice things up in the opening lap. And so it went through lap16 when the pit stops began, with everyone switching to the mandatory super-soft rubber. Raikkonen was the first of the lead group to pit; Hamilton was last, on lap 24. Meanwhile, Ricciardo suffered yet another mechanical failure and dropped out of the fray on lap 21. And so they circulated for the next 30 some-odd laps. Hamilton made a half-hearted challenge to his teammate for the lead, but nothing came of it. Vettel seemed to be running alone the entire time. Only Verstappen made a credible effort to move up, but he was rebuffed by Raikkonen and nothing came of it. The final finishing order was much the same as that at the start: Bottas, Hamilton, Vettel, Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Hulkenberg (Renault). The Force India duo finished 7th and 8th.

Well, they saved the worst race of the season for last, and it was a turkey of a weekend.

Recap of the 2017 Season

When all was said and done, Mercedes still had the best car (and the best driver) and therefore was able to win both the drivers’ and constructors’ championships. Ferrari was a very competitive second, with Red Bull third. Haas, our American team, improved, but still only managed to finish in 8th spot (of 10). The results:

Top Constructors Top Drivers

Mercedes 668 Hamilton (M-B) 363
Ferrari 522 Vettel (F) 317
Red Bull 368 Bottas (M-B) 305
Force India 187 Raikkonen (F) 205

Both Ferrari and Red Bull significantly closed the gap to the leader, and Force India and McLaren both look to be strong next season. The Red Bulls, piloted by Ricciardo and Verstappen, were right on Ferrari’s tail, despite less than stellar reliability, and to be honest luck. Given all of this, next year looks to be a barn burner.

Looking at the drivers, Hamilton has now won his 4th championship (along with most poles and a slew of other ‘bests’) and must be considered among the all- time greats. Bottas did well in his first year at Mercedes, and looks to be a future contender. Vettel is still excellent, but no longer can be considered at the top of the heap. Raikkonen is past his prime; he is still very good but no longer a real contender. Then, there is Fernando Alonso. He is still one of the best, but needs a competitive car to demonstrate his prowess. Hopefully, McLaren will provide one for him next year. Among the younger guys, Ricciardo seems to have taken a step back; he was clearly not quite as quick as Verstappen, his younger teammate. That puts Verstappen at the top of the heap in the ‘future contenders’ bracket. Baring mishap, he is a future champion. Of the other youngsters, Ocon looks to be the best.

The 2018 season begins in March. Applications for Personal Seat Licenses for the best spots at Siena are now being accepted.

Last Words

So, another F1 season is over and another year has passed by. We hope that 2017 was a good one for you and your loved ones, and that your holiday season has been wonderful. See you in 2018!

John Ratto

The Ratto Report – FCLV 2017 Biannual Review 1

The Ratto Report
FCLV 2017 Biannual Review 1

stick

Opening Commentary

Starting virtually immediately after the election, the stock market took a strong turn upward, likely in anticipation of a more business and tax friendly team in power at the capital. Then, some strange accusations began floating around concerning Russian interference in the election, Russian influence on Trump aides, wire-taps at Trump Tower, etc., etc. Six months later, and the news still centers on these issues. Oh well, discord seems to be the flavor of the day because…

Our Club was also ravished by strife and animosity during early 2017. We were at loggerheads with former president and owner of our original website, Jeff Wenger. As a result, some very nasty e-mails were transmitted by both sides, the types of e-mails that only further feuds rather than resolving them. I am happy to report that all now seems to be peacefully resolved, and everyone is playing nice once more. Perhaps Washington should follow in our example? Given all that, I can only once again remind you to visit our NEW! IMPROVED! website at ferrariclubvegas.com.

As for Formula 1: My source at the Barcelona test sessions reveals that he sees little to choose between the Ferraris, Red Bulls, and Mercedes Benzes. To me, this says that our team will be more competitive than it was last year. He says ALL the cars are MUCH faster than last year (probably due to being wider, having bigger wings, and having much wider tires). He further said the cars look better. He indicated that the Williams and Toro Rosso cars were the best of the rest, and that only the McLaren-Hondas were significantly off the pace.

Ferrari values are something that interests most of us. From what I see, values for the older, collectible cars seem to have stabilized at a level about 20% less than they were 2 years ago, but still far higher than they were say 5 years ago. No collectible experiences consistently increasing prices, so a slight down turn followed by a period of price stability should be viewed as a positive, at least in my opinion. Meanwhile, prices for the late model, bread-and-butter cars continues to decline gradually as newer, more advanced (and under warranty) models are introduced. This has always been the case. The trick is to identify when a depreciating model will become an appreciating collectible. 328s and Testarossas did that not long ago, which will be next?

Here is a recap of what transpired in the first half of 2017. We sincerely hope you can attend at least a few events over the next few months.

January 17: Board Meeting at the home of Elda and Dave Fanucchi

The Board gives many thanks to Elda and Dave for hosting this meeting in their home. The turnout was quite good, with President Chuck Damus, Treasurer Scott Howard, Stephane Pedaggi, Dan Fogle, Ted Schlazer, and yours truly in attendance. Items discussed included the Club’s financial health (so-so), the new President of the Desert Region (Rod Biddle in an upset victory – your vote counts!), and our own Board elections (with both Chuck and Ted being re-elected). Then, the new website was reviewed, and progress was noted. Please visit it: Ferrariclubvegas.com. Stephane and Cindy brought some new club merchandise for inspection and it was deemed nice stuff…and bought quickly. Check the website to purchase your own items; more are being added as we speak.

January 25: Social at Brio

The turnout (about 14) was less than stellar, but hey, it was the first social of the New Year held on a cold winter’s night. The atmosphere was warm and jovial, however, and the food was up to Brio’s normal high standards. In the end, a good time was had by all.

February 23: Social at Mastrioni’s

Despite another relatively small turnout – perhaps due to the nasty cold that has been going around (at least a few people ‘called in sick’ at the last minute), everyone seemed to have a wonderful time. This restaurant has very good Italian food and it is easy to get to, but the parking situation is poor. Oh well, you can’t have everything.

March 14: Board Meeting at Settebello Pizzeria

It was a beautiful evening to dine al-fresco, so that is exactly what we did. The turnout was good, with all Board members present except Scott Howard and Michael O’B. The good news is that we have a new member, Juan Valdes (be sure to greet him warmly if you should meet him at a future event), and the so-so news is that the Club’s bank balance hasn’t changed much. Publishing a calendar to generate income was discussed, as was the new website and the merchandise offered on it. Please visit: ferrariclubvegas.com to get up to date. Future events, socials, and drives were also discussed. At a subsequent special, double-secret board meeting held on March 22, it was decided to move forward with publishing a calendar Ted Schlazer will be the organizer of this effort, and we applaud his willingness to take on the task.

March 23: Social at the Bootlegger Bistro

A few relatively new faces (hello Al and Lorene Lindahl, owners a divine 458) and a few faces not seen lately (hello Paul and Shawna) were present to join some stalwarts, and a lively conversation ensued. It almost felt more like a board meeting than a social to be honest. Everyone seemed to enjoy the food prepared by this long standing Vegas institution and some even ordered desert.

April 9: Drive and Breakfast at Lake Mead

This drive was postponed from Saturday to Sunday due to weather concerns. As a result, some who were originally scheduled to attend dropped out, while others joined in. In any case, we had 6 cars making the jaunt, which is not a bad turn out, especially considering that each car was full (read 2). And what a great drive it turned out to be. The weather was superb. And there was virtually no traffic either coming or going, and not a constable was spied. As a result, the pace was pretty quick, and we were eating breakfast (not bad food) and taking in the spectacular views of Lake Mead before we knew it, and we were all back home before 1 pm. Good day.

April 27: Social at Bonefish Grill – Summerlin

Although attendance was sparse, where is everybody these days?, rumor has it the food was great and the conversation even better. Reports say our group was so animated that they had to be evicted at closing time. You all missed a great evening!

May 16: Board Meeting at the home of Chuck Damus and Kerri Howard

The core group (Damus, Fanucchi, Ratto, Scott Howard, and Schlazer) was present, while Mike O and Stephane P were not. The financials were reviewed quickly, as nothing has changed. Then the website issue was discussed. It seems that peace, or at least détente, has been negotiated with Jeff Wenger, and I say hallelujah to that. However, the notifications Jeff promised to add to his website have been delayed. In any case, the barrage of nasty letters has ceased, and the Board asks your forgiveness for being exposed to the vitriol. Meanwhile, ownership of our new website was discussed and the matter was resolved to the satisfaction of all. Events, past and future, were next on our agenda. The calendar shoot has been postponed due to lack of perceived interest. What’s wrong with you people? We are offering hot models combined with hot cars (a combination that never goes out of style), and the opportunity to have photos of your car in an upscale calendar. Seems like a no-brainer to me. The tentative date for the Holiday Party is December 2.

May 25: Social at Table 34

Despite a rash of no-shows, the turn-out was decent…and the food was great. Those that had the halibut seemed especially pleased. Once again, the conversation was animated, and extended long after the last plates were cleared from the table. Overall, it was a quite pleasant evening. Other than the no-shows, the only negative was that the winds prevented us from enjoying our food out on the deck.

Early June: Death of Rocky LaBriola

The Club was informed that one of our members passed to the great race track in the sky. Rocky was a long time Ferrari enthusiast and a current member of the Board of Directors of the Las Vegas Chapter. Our condolences and prayers go to Bianca, Rocky’s wife, and we all wish that he may rest in Peace.

June 22: Social at Vintner Grill

We had a strong turn-out, as we usually do, for our annual trek to this popular spot. After being ‘at sea’ for extended period, Michael and Karen Obradovich were in attendance to get their land legs back. The food was a bit hit-and-miss this visit, with some dishes being spectacular, others just OK. But the thing about VG is that the eye candy there will give you diabetes, and I say what a way to go.

UPCOMING EVENTS

The blazing hot months of summer are usually down-time for the Club. Socials and drives are generally less often, if ever, scheduled during this period. So, we ask all of you to bide your time, save up your energy, and then be ready and raring to go when the action resumes in September. Significant events in the fall include Italian Sports Car and Motorcycle Day at Siena Restaurant in early October. The next Board meeting is scheduled for July 11 at Bravo Cucina Italiana in the Galleria Mall. Socials will also resume in September, and they will usually be scheduled for the third Thursday of the month, so try to keep those evenings open. Meanwhile, be sure to visit our new website for the latest information. FerrariClubVegas.com

FORMULA 1 NEWS RECAP

March through June: F1 Viewing at Siena and other venues

Overview as of March 2017

As a new season begins, hope spring eternal for Ferrari once again being at the front of the grid. Can it really be 10 years since Ferrari’s last championship (with Kimi Raikkonen at the helm)? Based upon what I have heard of the testing in Barcelona, things are looking up for our red chargers, and a good year lies ahead. As mentioned above, they look to be seriously quick, and right on the pace of the Mercedes-Benzes that have dominated for the past 3 years. Maybe 2017 will be the ‘next year’ we have been waiting for.

As for other F1 news, the dust has settled since Rosberg won the championship last year, and then promptly retired. In response, M-B poached Valtteri Bottas from Williams to fill the empty seat. Talk about being in the right place at the right time, this should be a career defining move for the Finn. The big question is whether he can match the pace of team leader Lewis Hamilton. Bottas’ exit meant that Williams, which had already engaged newcomer Lance Stroll to fill the spot left by the retirement of Felipe Massa, had another position to fill, and they responded by bringing Massa out of retirement. Great! The Brazilian is a competitive driver, a nice guy, and a willing interviewee. The retirement of Jensen Button opened a spot at McLaren-Honda, which was filled by last year’s tyro, Stoffel Vandoorne. Good luck to him with that difficult beast of a car, and in trying to keep up with teammate Fernando Alonso.

Personally, I have been quite impressed by another youngster (not quite a rookie, though), Esteban Ocon, who is French despite his given name. This kid looks to be the next Max Verstappen, but perhaps with a bit of caution thrown into the blend. The Force India team also looks to be quite competitive, especially considering their relatively small capitalization.

So, it is with hope and a prayer that we welcome a new season. GO FERRARI!! We hope to see some of you at Siena Trattoria for race viewing, where prayers are sometimes answered

March 19: GP of Australia (1)

As usual, the first race of the season was held ‘down under,’ where our winter is summer. Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and (plain old) soft tires for the 57 lap race at Albert Park, and all of the fast qualifiers chose the ultra-softs for qualifying and to (therefore) start the race. The experts predicted that these tires would last about 20 laps, and that most teams would opt for a one stop strategy. The top 5 qualifiers were no surprise: Hamilton, Vettel, Bottas (new in the M-B), Raikkonen, and Verstappen (Red Bull). After that, though, there were quite a few surprises, with Grosjean (Haas!) 6th, Massa 7th, and Sainz (Toro Rosso) 8th. Ricciardo (Red Bull) spun and crashed in Q3, and was relegated to 10th.

The start was relatively uneventful, with Vettel making a move for the lead that was rebuffed by Hamilton; then everyone settling down to the business at hand. In the early laps, Vettel lost little ground, and it was clear that Hamilton was pushing hard to stay ahead of the Ferrari. Perhaps because of this, Hamilton seemed to be having tire wear issues, which was confirmed when he pitted for new rubber on lap 17, earlier than anticipated. Now in undisturbed air, Vettel laid down some really fast laps in an attempt to pad his margin over Hamilton, and hopefully be able to retain the lead after he stopped for tires. Meanwhile, after his stop, Hamilton came out behind Verstappen, who, as usual, proved to be very difficult to pass even though Hamilton was on fresh (soft compound) tires. All of this led to Vettel being able to make his stop on lap 23 and then being able to rejoin the fray barely ahead of Hamilton. Ferrari in the lead! Then something truly surprising happened, Vettel increased that lead (to about 10 seconds) throughout the remaining laps of the race, probably because Hamilton had used up his new tires while trying to pass Verstappen. Most of the remainder of the race was relatively uneventful. Bottas managed to make the tires on his Mercedes last until lap 26, when he pitted and subsequently finished 3rd. Raikkonen pitted on lap 27, and finished 4th. Verstappen was 5th, Massa 6th, and Sergio Perez once again drove a savvy race to bring his Force India to 7th. Both Haas cars failed to finish.

April 10: GP of China (2)

Friday practice was wet and cold, and not many laps were turned. Saturday morning practice was better, and it brought big hopes: The Ferraris were fastest of all, with the Mercedes close behind.

Pirelli supplied the super soft, soft, and medium tires for the 56 lap race, and all qualified and (planned) to start on the super softs. Verstappen had engine problems in Q1 and was relegated to 16th on the grid. Throughout Qualifying, times were close, and when the dust settled the order was Hamilton, Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Ricciardo.

Sunday was misty and cold, and the track was wet as race time neared. Given the circumstances, virtually all opted to start on the intermediate wet tires. With the sun popping out and the track drying fast, this proved to be ill-advised. Vettel stopped virtually immediately (lap 2) for dry weather tires, which also proved ill-advised as a couple of accidents and safety car periods in the next few laps allowed everyone else to stop under safety car controlled conditions. When things had settled down (by lap 7), everyone was on dry tires and the running order was Hamilton, Ricciardo, Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Vettel, with everyone bunched up at the front. How did Verstappen manage to climb from the rear of the pack to 4th you may ask…with some of the best and bravest driving I have ever witnessed. He simply ‘went for it’ and succeeded in blowing by everyone in the iffy damp conditions. He went from 16th to 7th after only 1 lap! By lap 15 he had passed – spectacularly, I might add – Raikkonen and Ricciardo as well, and was running second. Meanwhile, Vettel was clawing his way back towards the front. He was 3rd by lap 23 (with an epic pass on Ricciardo) and second by lap 28 (with a pass on Verstappen who had worn his tires with so much vigor) and soon was dogging Hamilton in the lead. But, victory was not to be. Although everyone stopped once more for fresh tires, Hamilton managed to control the gap from the lead and take the victory, with Vettel a close second, Verstappen 3rd, Ricciardo 4th, and Raikkonen 5th.

This, my friends, is getting interesting.

April 16: GP of Bahrain (3)

Free Practice 2 (Friday) saw the Ferraris, M-Bs, and Red Bulls trading fast times throughout, engendering hopes that it would be a competitive race. The times were again very close during Qualifying, but in the end the M-Bs ruled, with a big surprise: Bottas, not Hamilton, was on pole. Vettel managed 3rd, Ricciardo 4th, Raikkonen 5th, and Verstappen 6th. Less than 1 second covered the top 6. Pirelli supplied the super soft, soft, and medium (no one seemed to use these) for the 57 lap race. All the front runners qualified and started on the super-softs.

Vettel made a good start and was able to pass Hamilton at the first turn, and then push Bottas throughout the early laps. In fact, the opening laps were all very exciting, with passing throughout the field. After the dust had settled, the order at the front was Bottas, Vettel, Hamilton, Verstappen, Ricciardo, Massa, and Raikkonen. By lap 8, Bottas seemed to be having tire issues and was slowing down, thereby bunching the field. On lap 11, Vettel, on Bottas’ tail but unable to pass, was the first to stop (choosing another set of super soft tires, meaning that at least one more stop would be required). He was followed shortly thereafter by virtually everyone else when the safety car was deployed due to the failure of Verstappen’s Red Bull. Interestingly, the M-Bs switched to the soft tires, thereby threatening to go to the end without another stop. Bottas’ stop for tires was very slow, which then delayed Hamilton who was waiting his turn behind him. Seeing the pit box occupied, Hamilton dawdled on pit entry to prevent those behind from gaining an advantage, which caused the marshals to assess him a 5 second penalty. In any case, the running order behind the safety car was now Vettel, Bottas, Ricciardo, Hamilton (still to serve his penalty), Massa, and Raikkonen.

When the safety car pulled off, Bottas tried several moves to pass Vettel, but all were rebuffed in exciting fashion. Then, Vettel, on the faster super-soft tires, began to pull away from the field, while some good passing was happening in his wake, with both Hamilton and Raikkonen forcing their way past Ricciardo, and Alonso-Kvyat-Palmer battling tooth-and-nail for 13th. Hamilton passed Bottas on lap 27, and Vettel pitted for a second time on lap 34, fitting the required softs. He returned behind Hamilton, and on lap 36 the running order was Hamilton (still not having served his penalty), Vettel, Raikkonen, Ricciardo, and Bottas. Now on fresh tires, Vettel began to track down Hamilton, forcing him to stop for a second time, on lap 42. Hamilton served his 5 second penalty in the pits, and returned about 18 seconds behind Vettel and 9 seconds behind Bottas. On new tires, Hamilton put ‘the pedal to the metal’ and began setting fast laps in hopes of making it back to the front. He caught and passed Bottas on lap 46, when the gap to Vettel had been reduced to 10 seconds. In the remaining laps, Hamilton cut Vettel’s lead to about 6 seconds, but was not able to mount a serious threat to the Ferrari’s supremacy. The final order was Vettel, Hamilton, Bottas, Raikkonen, and Ricciardo, with Grosjean in the Hass 8th.

THIS WAS A GREAT RACE WITH A GREAT OUTCOME – HAPPY EASTER! Ferrari is reborn.

April 30: GP of Russia (4)

The weather was cool and perfect all weekend; the racing was a bit hotter. Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 52 lap race on the 3.5 mile circuit. Given that the surface at Sochi is not abrasive, everyone planned a one stop race and started on the softest, and fastest, ultra-soft rubber. With the top guys trading fastest laps at the very end of Q3, the starting order was undetermined until the final seconds, but in the end the Ferraris (!) prevailed: Vettel, Raikkonen, Bottas, Hamilton, Ricciardo, and Massa. This was significant, as it showed the Ferraris were equal to the Mercedes in qualifying trim, which had not previously been the case.

The Ferraris made a good start from the front of the grid, but Bottas made a great one from 3rd; he passed both red cars to take the lead. Farther down the grid, there was the usual crash heading into turn two, and the safety car was then deployed for a couple of laps. When racing resumed, the running order was Bottas, Vettel, Raikkonen, Hamilton, Verstappen, and Massa. Ricciardo, who was falling off the pace due to brake problems, retired on lap 5. While some stopped for new tires as early as lap 22, others postponed their stops until lap 35; all switched to the mandatory super-softs and were good to go to the end. Bottas, losing ground on worn tires, was the first of the leaders to stop (lap 28), followed by Raikkonen (lap 30) and Hamilton (lap 31). Vettel, still running competitive times on his worn tires, postponed his stop to lap 35, hoping to have the freshest tires for a hard run in the late laps. He rejoined the fray in second place, about 5 seconds behind Bottas. Then Vettel began to slowly reel the Finn in, reducing the gap to about 1.4 seconds by lap 43. But catching Bottas was easy compared to passing him. Although Vettel was nipping at his tail, managed to cut the lead to less than 1 second several times (and was thus able to activate his DRS), and had the fresher tires, Bottas’ determination and race traffic thwarted Vettel’s attempts to take the ultimate prize. The final order was Bottas (first career win), Vettel (less than a second in arrears), Raikkonen, Hamilton (who was far off the pace, perhaps due to overheating problems when running in dirty air), Verstappen (never a factor in this contest), and the Force India duo of Perez and Ocon.

This was another exciting race and another excellent (if not perfect) result for Ferrari. Vettel now leads the drivers’ standings by 13 points, while Ferrari and M-B are virtually deadlocked at the top of the manufacturers’ scoreboard.

May 14: GP of Spain (5)

The big news centered on the updated engine and aero packages most of the teams debuted for this race. While it seemed that all the cars improved marginally, the Red Bulls and the Force Indias seemed to improve the most. Meanwhile, out on the track, the M-Bs were fastest in Free Practice 1 and 2, while the Ferraris topped FP 3. The Red Bulls were close behind.

Pirelli supplied the soft, medium, and hard tires for the 66 lap race; but the soft tires were clearly the fastest by a significant margin. Everyone qualified and started the race on them. After a competitive, but uneventful, qualifying session, the starting order was Hamilton, Vettel (5/100 second behind), Bottas, Raikkonen, Verstappen, Ricciardo, and Alonso (surprise!).

Race day was sunny and nice, but quite windy, so much so that the cars were affected on the track. Competitive racing and Ferraris near the front must be a tonic for enthusiasm: Siena’s deli was packed with viewers on Sunday morning, Mothers’ Day be damned. When the lights went out, the top two got off clean with Vettel snatching the lead (!), but behind them all hell broke loose. Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Bottas tried to go through turn 2 three-abreast…it didn’t work…crash. When the dust had settled, Vettel was pulling away from second place Hamilton with Bottas significantly farther back, Ricciardo was 4th, and the Force Indias were 5th and 6th. Both Raikkonen and Verstappen were out. With the cars so evenly matched this year, there were exciting battles throughout the race and throughout the field. Of special note was a virtually race-long, wheel-to-wheel, tussle between Magnussen (Haas) and Sainz (Toro Rosso).

On lap 15, which seemed early, Vettel was the first of the leaders to stop for tires. He opted for another set of soft tires, all of which hinted of a possible 3 stop strategy. He returned to the fray behind Bottas (now second), and was trapped there for several laps, unable to use his fresh rubber to full advantage, and thereby ruining whatever strategy was contemplated. Hamilton, meanwhile, held out to lap 22 for his first stop, and switched to the longer lived but slower medium rubber, hinting of a possible one stop strategy. He returned in third place, but, clear of traffic, he began catching the leaders. At this point, Vettel made a spectacular pass on Bottas and stabilized his lead over Hamilton at about 6 seconds. Hamilton, clearly unhappy on the medium tires, stopped again on lap 37 to switch to the faster soft rubber. Vettel responded with his second stop on the following lap; he switched to the mandatory mediums. He rejoined the race side-by-side with Hamilton and the two duked it out for several hundred yards before Vettel snared the lead. This was nail biting. But the Ferrari lead was short lived, utilizing his DRS and soft tires, Hamilton managed to pass Vettel for the lead on lap 44, and to fight Vettel off to the end and take the victory. The finishing order was Hamilton, Vettel, Ricciardo (who seemed to run the entire race by himself), and then the Force India duo of Perez and Ocon (BTW this youngster bears watching – he is consistent, doesn’t crash, and is FAST).

This was another exciting race. If you aren’t watching F1 in 2017, you are missing out.

May 28: GP of Monaco (6)

The Ferraris looked to be fastest of all during the three Practice sessions, which was significant because Monaco is narrow and chock full of turns, making passing very difficult. Meanwhile, the Mercedes were a bit off the pace.

Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 78 lap race, but all the teams seemed to feel that even the ultra-softs were too hard for the conditions. Everyone qualified and started on the ultra-soft tires, and it looked as if only one stop would be required. Hamilton experienced lack of grip in Qualifying and was fighting the car throughout; he was lucky not to have hit a wall and failed to get to Q3. The Brit was relegated to starting in 14th place, highly unusual for him. Meanwhile, the fast guys qualified as follows: Raikkonen, Vettel, Bottas, Verstappen, Ricciardo, and Sainz (Toro Rosso).

After an uneventful start (unusual at Monaco), the starting order was pretty much maintained during the early laps, with the two leading Ferraris slowly pulling away from the rest of the field. At first, Vettel seemed satisfied to follow 3 or 4 seconds behind Raikkonen, but by lap 17 the German was close behind his teammate and threatening to pass. But, passing at Monaco is very difficult, and the status quo was maintained to lap 26, when the leaders began catching the slowest backmarkers, and passing even them proved to be difficult. Was it time to make a pit stop? After a few laps in slow traffic, the leaders began to pit for fresh tires; Verstappen was first (lap 33), Bottas second (lap 34) and Raikkonen followed on lap 35. All switched to the mandatory super-softs. But, when several backmarkers stopped for tires, Vettel was suddenly in clear air and opted to delay his stop to lap 40. Running on the still viable ultra-softs and with no one ahead to block his path, the German laid down some scorching laps, and was able to pit and return to the race just ahead of Raikkonen; he then proceeded to build a nice lead in the laps that followed. After all the front runners had pitted and resumed racing, the order was Vettel, Raikkonen, Ricciardo, Bottas, Verstappen, and Hamilton, who had delayed his first stop to lap 47 while working his way through most of the field. Several accidents and safety car periods in the closing laps bunched up the field, but no one at the front was able to pass for position. The final finishing order was Vettel, Raikkonen, Ricciardo, Bottas, and Verstappen. Hamilton was 7th, and both Haas cars finished in the points.

This was Ferrari’s first win at Monaco in 16 years – a significant event. Of note was the obvious displeasure Raikkonen displayed on the podium; he apparently felt that Ferrari shafted him with the pit stop strategy to benefit Vettel. There can be no question that things worked out badly for Kimi who could have easily won this race, but he was hit by a perfect storm rather than a planned assassination. It could not have been predicted when the backmarkers would pit, or that the ultra-soft tires still had so many fast laps in them. Vettel took a chance and it paid off. Moreover, once Vettel was ahead of Raikkonen, with both were on equal rubber, he easily built a significant lead, so the victory was not undeserved.

BTW: McLaren driver Fernando Alonso qualified 5th at the Indianapolis 500 and was fighting for the win when his engine blew in the final laps. Well done Senor!

June 11: Grand Prix of Canada (7)

The talk during Practice was of Fernando Alonso, and his stated desire to either start winning (unlikely) or leave McLaren-Honda. Thus the ‘silly season’ has officially begun. Meanwhile, out on the track, the Force Indias and Mercedes looked quite strong in Practice, while the Red Bulls struggled with engine issues.

Pirelli supplied the ultra-soft, super-soft, and soft tires for the 70 lap race, and all agreed that once again even the softest compound was too hard for the task at hand. Everyone complained of lack of grip, and qualified on the ultra-softs. Keeping even them warm proved difficult. In the end, Qualifying was relatively uneventful, and the starting order was Hamilton, Vettel, Bottas, Raikkonen, Verstappen, and Ricciardo. The Force India pair was 8th and 9th.

Verstappen made an astonishing start from 5th, and immediately catapulted to second; unfortunately, he clipped Vettel’s front wing in the process. Meanwhile, a bit farther back in the field, Massa, Sainz, and Grosjean came together, bringing out the safety car and relegating both Massa and Sainz to the scrap heap. Once racing resumed on lap 4, Vettel realized he needed a new hose, and pitted. He resumed in 18th on the super-soft tires, seemingly prepared to run until the end. A few laps later, Verstappen got his comeuppance, as his engine failed, putting him out of the contest. On lap 15, the leaders were Hamilton, Bottas, Ricciardo, Perez (Force India), Raikkonen, and Ocon (FI). Raikkonen was the first of this group to stop (lap 18) for new tires, opting for the super-softs. Ricciardo was next to stop, but he chose the soft rubber. Meanwhile, Vettel, on the super-soft tires while everyone ahead of him was on the ultra-soft rubber, was having difficulty working his way back to the front. He was 13th by lap 15 and 10th by lap 20. The last two to stop for new tires were Hamilton and Ocon (both on lap 33). After the dust had settled, the running order was Hamilton (with a substantial lead), Bottas, Ricciardo, Perez, Raikkonen, Ocon, and Vettel.

On aging tires and with little to lose at this point, both Ferraris made second stops for ultra-soft tires in hopes of running down the cars ahead in the remaining laps. Soon thereafter, however, Raikkonen began to experience brake problems, and he slowed down to assure finishing the race. By lap 55, Hamilton and Bottas were off in the distance, but a heated battle was being waged for 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th. Ricciardo, heading this group, was clearly holding up the rest, while 4th place Perez (Force India) was preventing his teammate (Ocon, 5th and on much fresher tires) from passing him to challenge the Red Bull. Vettel was bringing up the rear, obviously waiting for something to go wrong ahead so he could pounce. When nothing transpired over the next 10 laps, Ocon made a desperate move on Perez, which was rebuffed, but which allowed Vettel to make a daring pass on Ocon. Two laps later Vettel passed Perez, but time ran out before he could catch Ricciardo for a podium finish. The final finishing order was Hamilton, Bottas, Ricciardo, Vettel, Perez, Ocon, and Raikkonen.

So, it was not the best of results for Ferrari. But, given the obstacles that were overcome, it was the best that could be expected.

June 25: GP of Azerbaijan (8)

This street circuit clearly illustrates the dichotomy (and challenge) of Formula 1: It has a massively long (nearly 1.5 mile) straight, and 2 miles of tight, narrow corners. In fact, the straight is so long that the tires lose temperature there, so when the cars enter the turns they have less grip than the drivers anticipate. Given these circumstances, it was no surprise to see virtually every driver be repeatedly forced to take the escape roads (or clip barriers) when entering a corner too fast. Nevertheless, Qualifying proceeded, producing the following somewhat standard starting order: Hamilton, Bottas, Raikkonen, Vettel, and Verstappen. The Force India duo claimed 6th and 7th, while Ricciardo, who clipped a barrier a bit too forcefully in Q3, was relegated to 10th.

Pirelli supplied the super soft (all qualified and started on these), soft (but still too hard), and medium (no one wanted any part of these rocks) for the 51 lap race over the long 3.5 mile circuit. Everyone also seemed to be planning a one stop strategy.

Sunday morning saw a huge turnout for race viewing at Siena. The joke was that grandstands would need to be built if the crowd grew any larger. The opening lap saw two collisions. Vettel’s nose was clipped, and in a more serious accident Bottas and Raikkonen came together. While the two Ferraris fortunately experienced only minor damage, Bottas suffered a puncture and had to limp around the long circuit before entering the pits for new rubber. He rejoined in last place, lapped by most of the field. After the dust had settled, the top runners were Hamilton, Vettel, Perez (Force India), Verstappen, and Raikkonen. Around lap 12, Verstappen suffered an engine failure and Kvyat hit a wall, bringing out the safety car and initiating pit stops for new tires by virtually everyone. When the safety car exited on lap 16, a rash of accidents occurred immediately, most likely due to the bunched conditions and cold tires. In response, the safety car was deployed again.

Just prior to the restart that followed, a strange occurrence between Hamilton and Vettel transpired. Rather than speeding up in anticipation of the restart, Hamilton virtually came to a halt…right in front of Vettel, who inadvertently ran into the back of the Mercedes and damaged his front wing in the process. Hamilton’s action and its result seemed to incense Vettel, who then came abreast of the Mercedes and banged wheels with it. Despite all of this happening at maybe 30 mph, it was a dangerous move and the announcers all felt that a penalty (on Vettel), or even perhaps a double penalty (Vettel and Hamilton) was deserved. Then, a few seconds later when racing resumed, even more carnage ensued in the field, prompting the marshals to red-flag the race so the track could be cleared of the myriad debris that was splayed over it. This also permitted a manic rush to repair damaged cars. When the race resumed 20 minutes later (lap 21), the running order was Hamilton, Vettel, Ricciardo, Stroll (the teen Canadian rookie in a Williams), and Massa (also Williams).

The bunched field then produced a period of great racing, as the fast cars in the rear slowly worked their way back to the front. This was a series of side-by-side battles that represented the very best of F1. After about 10 laps of this engaging racing, it became apparent that Hamilton, still at the front, was having problems with the bodywork of his car: the cowl around the driver’s compartment was not properly attached, and it was getting looser by the lap. The Brit was finally forced to stop on lap 32 to rectify the issue, which gifted the lead to Vettel. But, just a few (suspiciously) short seconds later, it was announced that Vettel had been assessed a 10 second stop-and-go penalty for banging wheels with Hamilton many laps earlier during the safety car period. Vettel served the penalty on lap 34, and was able to rejoin the race immediately ahead of Hamilton. But, these two were now in 7th and 8th places respectively, while the leaders were Ricciardo, Stroll, Magnussen (Haas), Ocon, Alonso (of all people – demonstrating just how strangely this race had evolved), and Bottas, who had benefitted greatly from all that had transpired.

As the race continued, Bottas, Vettel, and Hamilton charged up through the field, each looking to make the best possible result from the strange set of circumstances that had occurred. By lap 40 (of 51), the front runners were Ricciardo, Stroll (hanging on for what would be the best result of his young career), Ocon (in the Force India), Bottas, Vettel, and Hamilton. By lap 45, all the leaders (now Ricciardo, Stroll, Bottas, Vettel, Hamilton, and Ocon) were running within view of the driver immediately ahead and behind…it was going to be a close one at the end. In the final 100 yards down the long straight heading to the checkered flag, Bottas managed to pip Stroll for 2nd. So the final result was Ricciardo, Bottas, Stroll, Vettel, and Hamilton. Raikkonen’s Ferrari expired on lap 46, the victim of one too many collisions.

So, once again it was not the best result for Ferrari. Mercedes padded its lead in the constructors’ standings, while Vettel managed to extend his lead over Hamilton by a few points in the drivers’ competition.

To call this race eventful would be the understatement of the year. It was exhausting to simply watch it. Looking back, there were an awful lot of ifs…Would Hamilton have won if his car had not experienced the bodywork issue? Would Vettel have won if he had kept his temper in check after rear-ending Hamilton during the safety car period? Where would Raikkonen have finished if his Ferrari were not bled dry by a thousand paper cuts? And there was one big question: Why didn’t Hamilton try to pass Vettel while following in his wake for the last 16 laps of the race. This is simply not like Hamilton. Was Hamilton having problems with his car? Was the Ferrari simply faster? This is important because it holds the future of the season.

Recap of the 2017 F1 Season through June

So, as of the end of June, with 8 races (nearly half of the season) in the books, things are close…really close. Mercedes leads Ferrari by 250 points to 226 in the constructors’ standings, with Red Bull (137) and Force India (yea for the underdogs – 79) the best of the rest. Meanwhile, Sebastian Vettel (Ferrari!) leads Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) by 153 points to 139 in the drivers’ championship race, with Valtteri Bottas (111 – Mercedes), Daniel Ricciardo (92 – Red Bull), and Kimi Raikkonen (73 – Ferrari) trailing.

As of now, it looks as if it will be a battle to the end. Finally, a really exciting and really competitive season, with Ferrari smack dab in the middle of the fray. We encourage you to visit Siena Italian Restaurant some Sunday race morning to pay homage at the church of Formula 1 in Las Vegas, and have a nice breakfast to boot. The grandstands are under construction.

John Ratto