Reader Rights: Pirelli pass the blame

F1 News
Friday, 04 September 2015 at 08:12
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In the wake of Vettel and Rosberg’s tyre blowouts in Spa, I must give credit to Pirelli for being extremely professional in their investigations and suggestions thereof – or at least one suggestion.
Unsurprisingly, Pirelli’s self-investigation concluded that the FIA and Ferrari are to blame for Vettel’s blowouts, not Pirelli themselves. Unless of course I have read and interpreted the report wrong! Pirelli claim that the failures at Spa were ‘results of exceptional circumstances’ of excessive tyre wear combined with the effect of debris on track.
This means that Pirelli passed the blame on to Ferrari for their impressive one-stop strategy that almost saw Vettel on the podium and on to the FIA for not cleaning the track of debris effectively. In Rosberg’s case too, they’ve been ambiguous at best indicating that track debris were to blame. There was no mention of Pirelli’s tyre that could’ve supposedly lasted 40 laps but decided to blow into pieces on lap 28.
Pirelli’s PR strategy seems to have worked though. It found good support in the two drivers who were affected in Spa – Rosberg and Vettel. In what seems to be a PR influenced move, the drivers praised Pirelli’s professionalism with Vettel specifically signing off with ‘we need long term answers’. Of course those who were expecting a confession from Pirelli (that we made a mistake!) or expected the usual ‘we are sticking to our brief’ (to make degrading but explosive tyres!) were grossly disappointed.
The FIA too released a statement indicating that they were ‘satisfied’ with Pirelli’s conclusions. Now this is where I am extremely surprised. The conclusions could also be interpreted as the FIA didn’t do their job well to ‘clean the track’ in Spa and that Pirelli are welcome to suggest better ways to do so. I guess Pirelli lacks guts to tell the FIA to do their job of managing track limits better!
The short term answer for the 2015 Italian Grand Prix though is Pirelli’s advisory to teams for camber and pressure limits – also the most sensible conclusion of their investigation. I see this as a positive step by the stakeholders of the sport, but will this also mean that no one will attempt a tyre strategy that involves stopping one lesser than normal? Are we in for predictable strategies on Sunday?
The long term answer could yield more predictability too if matters proceed the way they usually do in Formula1. A ‘maximum laps per compound per circuit’ has been voiced already and if this does see the light of day, tyre strategy will become like DRS aided overtaking – a farce!
Opinion by Kunal Shah is former single seater racer who now works in the sports marketing industry. He pens his views on Formula One on his personal blog – you can follow him on Twitter
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