The drag reduction system glitch that was disabled for the opening sequence of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix last weekend cost Valtteri Bottas a potential podium finish, says Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff.
Bottas was forced to start the race from the back of the grid after taking on new engine components ahead of the weekend, following a mechanical failure in Sao Paulo.
Normally, DRS is enabled on the third lap, however the system remained disabled until lap 18, as F1 race director Michael Masi explained that there was a data server crash, which caused the failure.
Bottas was forced to cut through the back of the pack without the aid of DRS, and was already inside the top ten when it was enabled.
"I think probably somebody in race control stumbled over a cable and it wasn’t properly plugged in the wall," Wolff joked on Mercedes' Pure Pit Wall debrief.
"But it was not great for Valtteri because he couldn’t progress through the field like we would have imagined and maybe he could have had a shot for P3 at the end.
"He was very close to Charles, but it is what it is, P4 on the road which is really strong considering that he came from last.”
Bottas was also allowed to qualify as normal on Saturday, despite knowing that he would be starting from the back regardless of his result.
Wolff explained that it let Bottas have a shot at winning the qualifying battle against his rivals, as there were few dangers due to it being the final race of the season.
"Normally during the season you would say let’s save some engine mileage and not go all the way to the end and also benefit from a tyre choice," Wolff said.
"But this time, it was the last race of the season and we wanted to give Valtteri a shot for pole position.
"He has performed really well most recently and also in terms of tyre choices, there were not a lot of options open after using the medium anyway in Q2 so we thought, out and out racer Valtteri, let’s go for pole position and see what he can achieve.”
Replies (3)
Login to replyJuJuHound
Posts: 352
Finally we have seen, as Will Buxton said, old fashioned way of racing and IMO F1 needs to have DRS cause... all the laics (potential new F1 fans) will not watch another race after this was happened during these first laps.
However what is negative - the smaller teams are not able to keep strongest behind so DRS doesn't work in favour of them. It was visible when Bot stuck behind Hulk if I remember well. After DRS came back Nico had no chances to keep it back.
calle.itw
Posts: 8,527
He did however have s brand spanking new pu what he ran with quali modes midrace. You saying a bloody Merc' running quali style can't be competitive without drs?
RogerF1
Posts: 501
What a winge. Poor Bottas can’t race without DRS with one of the most powerful cars on the grid. For once the race was more of a level playing field, it was the same for all. Why do Merc think they have the right to win all the time.