Who was the most impressive driver throughout the Malaysian Grand Prix weekend?
See below for my pick of the best drivers in the Malaysian Grand Prix.
Review each driver’s race weekend in detail below and vote for who you thought was the most impressive driver.
For your consideration
Here are some of the drivers who impressed me during the Malaysian Grand Prix weekend:
Sebastian Vettel – Steely stuff in qualifying to snatch back pole position from Lewis Hamilton.
Nick Heidfeld – Not knocked off his stride by his troubles in Australia or Renault’s problems in practice.
Kamui Kobayashi – Fought hard and clean as ever, and made a two-stop strategy work.
Paul di Resta – Showing up very well against his more experienced team mate.
Heikki Kovalainen – Clearly getting the most out of the T128 at the moment.
Compare all the drivers
Review what happened to each driver over the race weekend and compare their performances with their team mates using the links below:
Red Bull: Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber
McLaren: Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton
Ferrari: Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa
Mercedes: Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher
Renault: Nick Heidfeld and Vitaly Petrov
Williams: Rubens Barrichello and Pastor Maldonado
Force India: Adrian Sutil and Paul di Resta
Sauber: Kamui Kobayashi and Sergio Perez
Toro Rosso: Sebastien Buemi and Jaime Alguersuari
Lotus: Jarno Trulli and Heikki Kovalainen
HRT: Narain Karthikeyan and Vitantonio Liuzzi
Virgin: Timo Glock and Jerome d’Ambrosio
Vote for your driver of the weekend
Which driver impressed you the most throughout the Malaysian Grand Prix weekend? Cast your vote below and have your say in the comments.
Who was the best driver of the Malaysian Grand Prix weekend?
- Jerome d'Ambrosio (0%)
- Timo Glock (0%)
- Vitantonio Liuzzi (0%)
- Narain Karthikeyan (0%)
- Jarno Trulli (0%)
- Heikki Kovalainen (3%)
- Jaime Alguersuari (0%)
- Sebastien Buemi (0%)
- Sergio Perez (0%)
- Kamui Kobayashi (9%)
- Paul di Resta (4%)
- Adrian Sutil (0%)
- Pastor Maldonado (0%)
- Rubens Barrichello (0%)
- Vitaly Petrov (1%)
- Nick Heidfeld (38%)
- Nico Rosberg (0%)
- Michael Schumacher (0%)
- Felipe Massa (1%)
- Fernando Alonso (2%)
- Jenson Button (12%)
- Lewis Hamilton (3%)
- Mark Webber (10%)
- Sebastian Vettel (16%)
Total Voters: 510
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Australian Grand Prix result
Sergio Perez was voted the best driver of the Australian Grand Prix weekend:
1. Sergio Perez – 36%
2. Vitaly Petrov – 32%
3. Sebastian Vettel – 12%
Rate the Race: Malaysian Grand Prix
Don’t forget to cast your vote in the ‘rate the race’ poll as well:
2011 Malaysian Grand Prix
Browse all 2011 Malaysian Grand Prix articles
Bernard (@bernard)
11th April 2011, 18:23
Heidfeld, the top step beckons!
RIISE (@riise)
11th April 2011, 18:47
Agreed.
RandomChimp (@randomchimp)
11th April 2011, 19:23
I really hope so.
James
11th April 2011, 19:40
Unfortunately, only in dream land.
Fixy (@)
11th April 2011, 19:50
Agreed.
Movement (@movement)
11th April 2011, 20:51
Why? I really do not think he is anything special. He has not really outperformed Petrov, which shows that he is not really that quick…and he wasn’t when he was racing Kubica…I think good but rather mediocre is what he deserves. Not quick nick…
Kest (@kest)
12th April 2011, 1:25
I agree, he is a decent driver, but I would have loved to have seen what Kubica could do in this car.
HxCas (@hxcas)
12th April 2011, 1:40
Remember Petrov could beat Kubica when he was on form, he’s quick albeit inconsistent
Mike
12th April 2011, 10:38
Well, in this race he clearly did out perform Petrov. I think time will tell, but to be honest. Even if you don’t like him, consider maybe the top step beckons because it’s alluded him for so long?
Movement (@movement)
12th April 2011, 12:06
in retrospect, I agree he probably deserves a win having come so close in many occasions – I dont dislike him – I think he is good, but not as good as Kubica, while many people think he is. I am also not determined to stick to this opinion of him, if people can show me why they rate him really highly, I could try also!
Spaulding (@spaulding)
12th April 2011, 21:49
Petrov couldn’t keep the car on track enough to bring it home. If you can’t finish, you might as well not even of shown up. Heidfeld beat Petrov by a mile (or several as the case may be). Period.
BBT (@bbt)
14th April 2011, 7:16
Well actually he has outperformed Petrov apart from when half the side of the car was missing.
Todfod (@todfod)
11th April 2011, 22:28
Heidfeld deserves it. Its good to have him racing the front runners like he did in 2007 and 2008.
UKfanatic (@)
12th April 2011, 1:38
heidfelf despite the bad pit stop and the friday problems showing that despite the break hes still on top of his game
alex
12th April 2011, 1:59
People just dont like Vettel around here… :)
the sri lankan
12th April 2011, 5:25
i dont like him at all…wanna see a new champ this year
Nigelstash (@)
12th April 2011, 10:41
Don’t mind Vettel as a person – he’s living the dream and who can blame him. What I dislike is a driver with limited ability winning everything. The Red Bull is an amazing car, but imho there are several drivers who could make it go quicker and who are more complete drivers. Webber is a good guy but in terms of talent he is about on a par with Heidfeld. Vettel is a little better but nowhere near Alonso, Hamilton, Kubica, Button. When he proves he is by battling through the field and managing to overtake – or even by defending fairly! – then I will like him.
dennis (@dennis)
12th April 2011, 14:09
To even come into that situation, he would have to screw up either the qualyfing or the start. Which he didn’t in 2011. So far you can’t do better.
And when he was behind someone this season, he managed to get past quickly. Massa was nothing more but mince meat.
leepat0302 (@leepat0302)
12th April 2011, 19:58
+1 Spot On Most of the field could win races in the RB7 and Hamilton, Alonso, Kubica, Button could make a lot easier job of it in that car
David-A (@david-a)
12th April 2011, 22:23
@ Nigelstash-
Kubica didn’t prove himself to be much better than Heidfeld, so he hasn’t proven himself as a driver as good as Alonso or Hamilton in my eyes.
Vettel had numerous battles through the field in the Toro Rosso, and is simply an excellent qualifier, which is why he doesn’t often need to battle through the field in the Red Bull. I only rate Alonso and Hamilton slightly ahead of him.
David-A (@david-a)
12th April 2011, 22:24
Spot on dennis. I can’t believe people are criticising him for being too good this year so far.
Movement (@movement)
12th April 2011, 12:12
Vettel is hugely arrogant…as is hamilton, alonso, schumacher…and that is something which unfortunately you have to expect from young sports starts these days, but its a bit irritating. I would say most people around here have plently of respect for vettel’s abilities as a driver, which is ultimately what matters.
The ares that actually irritates me about him however is his radio messages. Cyring in Abu Dhabi 2010. Sorry but I thought that sounded ridiculous – think back to Button’s ‘we are the champions’ and you know what you’d rahter hear broadcast around the world! Then this season, his radio messages have been so arrogant, as though he runs the team, he really is positioning himself to be no.1. He deserves huge respect for his driving, but he easily irritates me. Oh and I should add that I do not pretend to know anything about his personality other than through clips from the races and media, and I am sure that it is a different person off the track or whatever – I do not assume that I know anything about him but what little I see can irritate. then again, I love watching him in Q3 when you know he is going to bring some insane pace. Then I love him, because it is special to see.
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
12th April 2011, 12:47
An arrogant F1 driver, you say?
Whatever will be next? Fluffy sheep?
Abe
12th April 2011, 14:32
actually irritates me about him however is his radio messages.
Coefficient
12th April 2011, 15:45
Indeed, I just want to punch him when he says time after time “that’s what i’m talkin about” when he wins yet another
race from pole in his flexi-bull.
I’d love to see him handle Hamilton in equal machinery. He’d crying for a different reason then!!
alex
12th April 2011, 21:23
1) In quali, Mclaren is as faster as RB (at least the last Saturday). Vettel was the difference.
2) You cannot blame him for winning from P1. Senna won 29 times starting from Pole.
I do think most here just want to see Hamilton/Button doing the same…
Vettel is fantastic and I wonder how happy Newey is for finally having someone to give his cars what they deserve. :) Except for Mika (98/99).
BBT (@bbt)
14th April 2011, 7:21
Agree, but that is not surprise is has always been the case with the top professional sportsmen in all sports (not just the young), unfortunately is one of the traits that gets them to the top in the first place.
nik (@nik)
12th April 2011, 10:03
I know that there is a habit in these to go for a guy who didn’t win the race but performed well, but in both races so far this year Vettel has really been head and shoulders above everybody else.
It is easy to overlook because we expect him and RB to qualify first and to win, but remember that he has had car problems and still managed to coast home.
He gets my vote on both races, and I am by no means a fan of the German
Bernard (@bernard)
12th April 2011, 12:51
Whilst I agree with your reasoning nik, unless Vettel does something out of the ordinary on route to victory I have a hard time giving him the accolade (anything other than a win for Vettel would be sub par at the moment).
BasCB (@bascb)
12th April 2011, 10:24
He really shows he is a Quality driver. And a nice bloke. Look at this open letter to Kubica!
AndrewTanner (@andrewtanner)
12th April 2011, 13:29
Crikey, you have an avatar!
matt88 (@matt88)
11th April 2011, 18:23
My vote goes to Nick the Quick. he had some rust after a year away from F1 – and in Melbourne he was obscured by Petrov – but yesterday he showed he’s one of the best replacements for Kubica. Maybe the Pole’d have done something better, but Renault seem in a pretty good shape right now.
Movement (@movement)
11th April 2011, 20:52
How can you base all that on one race? as you say yourself, in melbourne he was eclipsed by petrov…and we know that petrov really is not very fast at all.
James Brickles
11th April 2011, 21:09
Heidfeld was more unlucky than anything in Melbourne. Missed Q2 thanks to a very slow Hispania and then carried quite substantial sidepod damage from the first lap in Melbourne after contact with Alguersuari (I think).
UKfanatic (@)
12th April 2011, 1:43
he was bad on qually thats a fact but in the race it wasnt his fault
dim23 (@)
11th April 2011, 18:32
I voted for Webber, started without Kers lost 6 positions, and fought his way back to 4.
adamf184 (@adamf184)
11th April 2011, 18:39
Same here! Dont forget his superb pass round the outside of a KERS’d up Massa. Surprised he didnt get a mention in the article.
Movement (@movement)
11th April 2011, 20:53
There was a rather large tyre difference there…
Mack41 (@mack41)
12th April 2011, 0:32
The way he played with the throttle to get an edge on Massa was pure driving. Epic. Can’t wait for this weekend
Mads (@mads)
11th April 2011, 18:43
It wasn’t the lack of KERS that made his start bad. It was just a bad start, made worse by the lack of KERS. A solid drive back, but the start was very poor.
David-A (@david-a)
11th April 2011, 20:01
I agree with this.
Dafffid (@dafffid)
11th April 2011, 20:03
Not true. It was a) a lack of KERS and b) a clutch problem (check the BBC website for confirmation on that). More than a solid drive back, a stellar drive back
Movement (@movement)
11th April 2011, 20:55
haha clutch problem as in he did not release the clutch in the right way! he had a bad start, which he admitted himself. The lack of kers really then made it far worse over the next lap or two…
Coefficient
12th April 2011, 15:50
He had a clutch problem off the in the parade lap and they couldn’t fix it before the start proper so it just repeated and he couldn’t get away properly.
Mark Hitchcock
11th April 2011, 20:07
Completely agree.
jsw11984 (@jarred-walmsley)
11th April 2011, 20:12
As did I, very impressive drive, I think he could well have been challenging at least Button for 2nd place if he hadn’t had the KERS failure.
damonsmedley (@damonsmedley)
12th April 2011, 2:16
Whilst I think Webber was the best driver on Sunday (only just edges out Heidfeld), I wasn’t going to miss an opportunity to vote for Nick. I am not a fan, but I do hope he wins a race this year. I also hope Petrov wins a race. That would be quite amusing.
Macca (@macca)
12th April 2011, 10:39
That right there is why these polls hold no weight. You admit Webber was the best driver but still don’t vote for him. I think the name of these polls should be changed to “Who is the driver you like better”
I voted for Webber, yes he got a bad start but with KERS I think he would have only dropped 1 or 2 spots. To fight back through the field without KERS was a superb effort. He showed raw pace and never gave up, almost grabbing a podium haveing done 1 more stop than most other contenders.
damonsmedley (@damonsmedley)
12th April 2011, 15:05
That’s quite a silly statement to succeed my comment in which I stated I was not actually a fan of Heidfeld… :P But Webber wasn’t the best of the weekend. He was the best on Sunday. Heidfeld was the best of the weekend – so I voted for him.
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
12th April 2011, 15:30
So where have all the Perez and Petrov fans gone, then?
Victorinox
12th April 2011, 16:32
+1
damonsmedley (@damonsmedley)
13th April 2011, 10:57
Agreed Keith. Sorry Macca, but your argument is flawed.
TheVillainF1 (@thevillainf1)
11th April 2011, 18:33
Kobayashi for sure. When voting for these things many just look at the front runners, but again a little further to the back Kamui showed great racecraft – what a battle with Webber! – had great pace overall AND made a two stopper work for him. Great quali getting into q3 as well.
dim23 (@)
11th April 2011, 18:40
Many look at the front runners because there is more drama there, whilst Kobayashi story is a bit different, he doesn’t feel pressured by his teammate and nor he’s expected to bring podiums or wins just a few points there and Sauber will be happy. But for sure he deserves, very good action from him again, he maybe deserves a place at Ferrari more than Massa does.
Leggacy (@leggacy)
11th April 2011, 19:08
Agreed! probably one of the most entertaining drivers to watch on track. knows how to pass. Also knows when to let the other guy through. Can’t wait to see how he does at Suzuka this year.
BS (@bs)
11th April 2011, 21:07
Agreed, good drive along with some excellent fights, especially his first stint duel with Webber was very impressive. Sauber have the ugliest Livery on the grid, but he makes the car great to look at.
Good to see DiResta getting a mention too, too bad he didn’t end up in the points. Beating Sutil right away, driving a very solid race.
McLaren Fan 17
12th April 2011, 9:49
Di Resta was in the points – he finished 10th.
Vanja
11th April 2011, 18:38
he’s the only man that brought some fun in the race, great overtaking. hamilton screwed him up by slowing down, except that great race
Vanja
11th April 2011, 18:39
lol, forgot the name ALONSOOOO :)
dennis
11th April 2011, 18:53
Yeah, crashing into Hamilton is not as easy as he made it look!
bananarama (@bananarama)
11th April 2011, 19:05
Without the crash I guess I would have voted for Alonso, he clearly got more out of the car than was in it. But then he blew it, which is okay, he is only human after all, but the best driver must be someone who didn’t crash.
Todfod (@todfod)
11th April 2011, 22:47
Gotta agree with you. Unfortunately, it was quite a costly driver error, and a crap way to ruin a good run for 2nd place.
Laranja Mecanica
12th April 2011, 22:52
Yeah, well, I would have voted for Alonso for anything that came between his awful start and the crash (he should have expected the weaving, the brake-testing and all-out unsportmanslike attitude from LH anyway).Too bad we were deprived of a clean, non-DRS overtaking, something to replay millions of times over, like Brazil 2007.
Anyway, counting everything, FA was pretty good but not the best out there in Sepang.
RandomChimp (@randomchimp)
11th April 2011, 18:45
Oh performance at Melbourne, it stang
And the haters all came out and sang,
They thought he was finished,
His quickness diminished,
But he came back for third in Sepang.
f1alex (@f1alex)
11th April 2011, 19:56
Haha awesome! Have you been reading the F1 poetry thread in the forum by any chance?
RandomChimp (@randomchimp)
11th April 2011, 20:05
Thanks :) I read some of that thread a while ago but only just had a worthwhile flash of inspiration. Nick always makes me feel rhymey.
Cyclops_PL (@cyclops_pl)
11th April 2011, 20:18
Haha, nice piece of poetry mate :)
Randy
11th April 2011, 21:24
“Yield, Yield” cried Lewis,
But Nick would not yield.
And With talent inspired,
and courage revealed,
Tho his pit stop was jive,
And he fell back to five,
In that sleek black Renault,
Quick Nick was not slow.
He came back for a third thru the field.
Mouse_Nightshirt (@mouse_nightshirt)
12th April 2011, 1:31
COTD!
Younger Hamii(Formerly Younger Hamilton)
11th April 2011, 18:45
No One
George (@george)
11th April 2011, 18:49
I’ll go with Heidfeld, he combined a quick and tidy race with some punchy overtaking at the start and solid defense vs. Hamilton and Webber.
mole (@mole)
11th April 2011, 18:50
I was tempted to vote for Alonso’s “Don’t worry, I’m pushing…” comment, which made me chuckle. However, for my serious vote it was Webber! He made a great comeback drive, and it reminded me of a thought common in football – good teams dont always win 7-0, they win when they shouldnt. Webber clawed back a lot of points after that disastrous first lap, a few more laps and he may have been third from 10th!
Junpei (@junpei)
12th April 2011, 13:45
That was an awesome comment! I’m not an Alonso fan tbh, but he was immensely cool this weekend :)
Nin13 (@)
11th April 2011, 18:51
I voted for QUICK NICK, for proving all those who were criticizing him hat they were wrong and he still has got what it takes.
dennis
11th April 2011, 18:56
Heidfeld for me as well. The way he kept the Renault under control with Hamilton and later on Webber behind him was wonderful to watch.
Allthough it’s a tough one yet again with the flawless weekend that Vettel put together.
davey (@djdaveyp87)
11th April 2011, 18:57
Sebastian Vettel again the driver of the weekend. He did well to pinch pole by a tenth and controlled the race. Bit pee’d off about his start though.
Lewis Hamilton did a terrible job when he started struggling with his tyres and I’m certain he could have done more to eak out the last 3 laps. Even if he was 5 seconds slower per lap he would have lost less time than pitting.
Special Mention to Nick Heidfield and Paul Di Resta who also had good races.
Eggry (@eggry)
11th April 2011, 18:57
I voted for quik Nick. even though I like Alonso’s radio “I’m pushin, I’m pushing, don’t worry” very much. If he had not crashed with Hamilton, I would have chosen him.
Ral (@)
11th April 2011, 19:10
Tempting to vote for Kobayashi because he was fighting throughout the race with someone. Webber, Schumacher, Petrov, he doesn’t care.
But voted for Heidfeld. His car is probably a tad slower than McLaren and Ferrari (and of course the Red Bull), so despite the pressure on him to lead the team and his failure to do so in Australia, he stil beat 4 cars faster than him. 3 of which started ahead of him on the grid.
f1geek
11th April 2011, 19:18
Nick Heidfeld, everyone criticized him after Australia, but he showed his real pace in Malaysia.
offtopic : the following website claims that Bahrain will host the final round instead of Brazil.
http://www.f1arab.com/2011/04/11/bahrain-to-host-the-last-race/
pSynrg (@psynrg)
11th April 2011, 19:20
I just noticed this after I posted. Bahrain shouldn’t be permitted to host anything until they sort their act out.
verstappen (@verstappen)
11th April 2011, 20:15
My Arabic is a little rusty and ever since Trulli’s collumn got lost in translation last week, I don’t trust GoogleTranslate enough to know for sure what’s written…
pSynrg (@psynrg)
11th April 2011, 19:19
This is such a no brainer, of course it was Vettel.
DaveW (@dmw)
11th April 2011, 19:29
Heidfeld. Ausgezeichnet.
Epic start. Then he had Hamilton riding on his back in the first stint but kept totally cool. Then even after getting jumped by McLaren, he kept at it. In the end, he had again to deal with massive pressure for a superior car and was perfect. That was a brilliant drive. Webber is a close second, but his come back drive was partially necessitated by his own terrible start. KERS doesn’t even work until third gear, by which point cars were already whipping by him.
Fer no.65 (@fer-no65)
11th April 2011, 19:31
I’m very surprised by Kamui, because he just doesn’t seem to be the typical japanese driver.
He’s aggressive, yes, but he’s hell clean. He seems calmed down, and relaxed, getting the most out of the car, and battling a lot cleanly.
My vote goes to KK :)
Florida Mike
11th April 2011, 19:50
I agree. He would have been one of the last drivers I would have given a chance to score points on two stops. Maybe the Sauber is tire-friendly, but I think we saw a new, more mature Kobayashi.
BS (@bs)
11th April 2011, 21:18
I think we’ve been seeing that ever since half way through last season, since then he’s been consistently finishing in the points. Of course, races like Valencia and Suzuka stand out for him being a total badass, but he’s been good over a race distance for a while.
David-A (@david-a)
11th April 2011, 20:00
I went for Vettel for another class drive.
Honorable mentions to Button for a solid performance, getting himself ahead of Hamilton. Also Heidfeld for a superb bounce back from Albert Park, and Kobayashi for lots of good battling and a good finish.
OEL F1 (@oel-f1)
11th April 2011, 20:02
Felipe Massa, because he’s back!
BS (@bs)
11th April 2011, 21:19
Yeah, if Alonso keeps crashing into cars a couple of positions in front of Massa, he’ll finish on top no problem. :P
OEL
12th April 2011, 16:05
Alonso wouldn’t need to crash into anyone if the pit crew would just do their job. :D
Dafffid (@dafffid)
11th April 2011, 20:05
Went with Heidfeld, but Webber was up there. And Vettel, i don’t think RBR have any advantage on KERS friendly tracks, I just don’t think either McLaren driver is fast enough to catch the boy at the moment
verstappen (@verstappen)
11th April 2011, 20:11
Hard one.
Kobayashi provided the most entertainment, Heidfeld got to the podium with the third or fourth car, Webber fought back – without KERS, Button saved his tyres and made sure he was there at the end, DiResta showed his maturity as a rookie, Alonso entertained and looked like he was going to get the Ferrari where it didn’t belong, Massa beat Alonso…
But it has to be Vettel:
– in only 12 laps he put the car on pole (where some others drove 17+)
– he passed Massa on track
– and drove flawlessly to first
Steph (@)
11th April 2011, 20:14
Any of the drivers you mentioned Keith would be a good choice but I chose Heidfeld. He had an awful time in Aus and for most of the Malaysia weekend but more than delivered in qualifying and practice plus there was the added bonus of him delivering the podium right after DC said he’d soon be under rpessure if he didn’t up his game :P
For one off performances I was impressed with Button’s, Schumacher’s and Massa’s Sunday performance and Alonso’s qualifying.
Cyclops_PL (@cyclops_pl)
11th April 2011, 20:16
Strange to vote on Renault driver again. Even stranger it’s still not Kubica. However, Heidfeld deserved it. Brilliant drive.
TheScuderia (@)
11th April 2011, 20:22
This was a tough choice. But I decided to go with Heidfeld over Kobayashi as my driver of the race.
TommyB (@tommyb89)
11th April 2011, 20:27
Mark Webber. Amazing job to finish 4th despite KERS problems and being as low as 15th in the race.
His move on Massa was also sweet.
TFLB
11th April 2011, 21:56
I thought the lowest he was was tenth?
boris the one-eyed gerbil
11th April 2011, 23:01
Webber was the first to make an unforced pitstop (from about 10th) so he dropped well back but then set a series of fast laps to come back into it, although he still had to make up enough time to overcome the extra stop.
GameR_K (@gamer_k)
12th April 2011, 10:28
It wasn’t unforced, it was planned. Remember the radio-call say ‘Plan A’
boris the one-eyed gerbil
13th April 2011, 12:23
“unforced” meaning he wasn’t forced to pit – you can substitute “planned” if you really want to (they might even mean the same thing here!)
JamieFranklinF1 (@jamiefranklinf1)
11th April 2011, 20:43
I would definitely not say Webber was the driver of the day. He’s in the quickest car out there, and despite his poor start, he only managed 4th. The fact is that he is terrible on his tyres, and without the added 4th stop he would have done better.
He will not have a decent race, or even a win until he is able to be decent enough on his tyres to stop at least the same number of times as everyone else.
That’s why I think Jenson gets it. He did a great job of getting to second. He knew what was wrong with his car at the start and fixed it during the race to secure himself valuable points.
Obviously Heidfeld should get a mention too, he drove a great race. And of course Kobayashi for his entertaining racing. But also to Sauber for designing a car that is much better on its tyres than any other team out there.
jsw11984 (@jarred-walmsley)
11th April 2011, 21:33
Yet, all the drivers ahead of him had a 3 stop strategy and they all had working KERS off the line, so I think that is why he deserves driver of the day
dragon
12th April 2011, 3:22
His tyre wear would be slightly higher than those around him because he spent most of the afternoon up the rear end of a leading car. If you know you’re on a 4 stop strategy, there’s no need to be AS cautious with wear.
MattHT (@mattht)
11th April 2011, 21:14
Heidfeld for me. Great start and held it together when it mattered.
wigster (@wigster)
11th April 2011, 22:04
I voted for Kovalainen. I think he deserves it for finishing less then a second behind a midfield car that didnt have an obvious issue which would have been impossible last year and no one would have predicted pre race. If the race was a lap longer who knows, he may have finished in front of an established car for the first time.
Also just because the drivers in the slow cars don’t get much coverage or score points doesnt mean the drivers dont deserve credit for a good drive.
I did connsider Button and Webber and Kobiashi but they werent really stand out performances this week i think.
sam3110 (@sam3110)
11th April 2011, 22:26
Heidfeld, many people are overlooking the fact that he had limited running in practice and therefore the car setup wouldn’t have been amazing, yet he had an epic start, and managed to keep his car ahead of all but 2 of the field. Personally, I think this year will earn him a full time spot on the grid again for next season, if Kubica is back and they need Petrov’s money, I can see Quick Nick moving along into Mercedes, or Williams, or even Sauber again
Oliver
11th April 2011, 22:29
You call hin Nick the quick, I call him ready steady Nick. Nothing sensational there. He lacks that extra 3%.
So my vote goes to Kobayashi.
His car is about a second and a half slower and he drove consistently while having several battles. Showing us he has the tactical awareness and completely understands vehicular dynamics.
gzi (@gzi)
12th April 2011, 5:54
comparing Nick and Kamui I totally agree with this comment.
Scarlet
11th April 2011, 22:54
Petrov. Flying high at the moment!
Tango (@tango)
12th April 2011, 9:17
Shouldn’t make me laugh like that, I’m on this site at work!
boris the one-eyed hamster
11th April 2011, 23:28
I am disappointed in you Keith, as you offer up 5 drivers as “sensible” options but ignore the real driver of the weekend – the driver who topped the times in 2 out of 3 practice sessions and got 2nd in the other, and who, despite getting swamped off the startline because of a broken car, fought his way through the field (including brilliant passes such as driving right around Massa on Turn 1), set the fastest lap (again with a broken car) and only just missed out on a podium.
He didn’t have a perfect weekend but to put someone like his teammate at the top of your list, who only had one good session (Q3 – but agreed, it is the most important one) but who only held on to 1st place going into the first corner by changing direction 6 or 7 times to block Hamilton, which then allowed Heidfeld to pass the McLaren and hold it up for many laps which in turn allowed the Red Bull to pit under no pressure whatsoever. Did Vettel even make a pass in the race? Or did he just drive his 100% working Red Bull to an easy win.
GameR_K (@gamer_k)
12th April 2011, 10:41
Nah, Vettel drove into Hamilton, pushed him into the grasp of Nick, radioed WhitMarsh to stall Hamilton in the pits, bribed Alonso to run into the back of the McLaren and finally hypnotised Lewis to make an extra pitstop. Still can’t believe the Shoot-the-winner-because-others-are-lame attitude. Tell you what, topping practise sessions is not goign to get your fav driver points. Vettel didn’t make a pass because he didnt have to. You weren’t sulking when you saw the dominant FW14B or F2002
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
12th April 2011, 10:51
Topping the times in practice is nice but you have to do it when it counts – and Webber didn’t.
That said I’m not knocking him – his progress through the field was good even though he didn’t have KERS.
JamesC1991
11th April 2011, 23:43
Has to be Mr Vettel.
yet another stunning lap in qualifying and drove a beautiful,controlled race
skodarap (@skodarap)
12th April 2011, 1:15
Voted Massa. Don’t like him much, and rate him pretty low among the current drivers, but for once he drove a ballsy race overtaking when he could – not getting stuck behind the car in front for long.
taurus (@taurus)
12th April 2011, 1:25
When this poll is closed we’ll have to dock Lewis and Fernando 20 votes each
Randy
12th April 2011, 7:35
Shouldn’t affect Alonso in the ranking.
Doance (@doance)
12th April 2011, 1:58
Webber for sure! Made the race exhilarating for me!
wasiF1 (@wasif1)
12th April 2011, 2:37
Heidfeld to me was the driver of the day as he made a good start & despite loosing in the pit stop came back strongly bu passing Hamilton.
budchekov (@budchekov)
12th April 2011, 4:50
Vettel, four in a row,can anyone beat this guy? Impressive driving, seems unflappable at the moment.
Stefan
12th April 2011, 4:52
Vettel should be voted most, he didn’t had KERS and was still able to win easily. Heidfeld’s start (a copy of Alonso’s start in 2006?) was great but he lost some places after the pitstop.
And Alonso had a good race, but this time he crashed into Hamilton, in Melbourne Ferrari was on the wrong pitstop strategy. So I think Ferrari will be racing for victory if they’re on the right strategy.
DavidS (@davids)
12th April 2011, 6:07
I voted for Webber, even though his start was dreadful, the strategy he used required some ballsy driving. He did more overtakes than anyone else, including that one on Massa in the turn one/two complex that was ring-clenching.
He dealt with traffic brilliantly, something which Vettel didn’t have to deal with, and I’m wondering how he will cope.
Daniel
12th April 2011, 7:28
Kobayashi or Heidfeldt. I cannot choose.
Nevertheless, who was Heidfeldt in all these years? Who was Button before moving to BrawnGP and then McLaren? Who was Webber before moving to RedBull? What’s the point? Simple! The driver’s contribution in a race is too small. Take almost any driver on the grid and put him in a really good car and you’ll have a champion!
box this lap (@sebashuis)
12th April 2011, 8:06
Di Resta was ok. I’ve voted Vettel because of his wining streak of 4 races.
on the other hand, what did you boy do? just driving laps the other’s were fighting for positions but nevermind Vettel deserve a vote once in a while.
Dan Thorn (@dan-thorn)
12th April 2011, 8:09
Has to be Vettel.
Heidfeld drove a very good race but I can’t be anything other than super impressed by how cool Seb was throughout the race, how he pushed at critical times and how he backed off at the right moments to preserve his tyres. His pole lap was mega as well and he never looked flustered or under pressure. He’s a totally different person to the Vettel of a year ago. The rest of the field need to be very worried…
jhg103 (@joshgeake)
12th April 2011, 8:34
Well done Heidfeld but really all he did was get a great start and run a solid race.
Personally I think the stars are Kobayashi, Schumacher and Webber – they really earned their points finishes with all the overtaking.
McLarenFanJamm (@mclarenfanjamm)
12th April 2011, 8:51
I think Heidfeld did a solid job, with a solid car. Vettel won with ease which pretty much everybody expected.
Di Resta on the other hand achieved a finish that probably wasn’t expected of him, but Kobayashi had an exciting race with many close battles.
Tough call and I’m clearly in the minority, but I’m going to vote for Di Resta. Only the 3rd rookie to score points finishes in his first two races, the boy deserves some credit.
futureshock999 (@)
12th April 2011, 8:51
Great to see Heidfeld back – he will never be world champion material, but he has way more talent than some people that had drives last year, and he showed that on Sunday with a great performance in a car that probably did not deserve third. Kobayashi was utterly fantastic as well, showing his maturation as a driver (never expected to write those words). And lastly, Button’s stealth race into second was smart and smooth, exactly what you would expect of him.
Puffy (@puffy)
12th April 2011, 9:07
What I find interesting is how skewed the votes are toward the top finishers. At the time of writing this, a full 78% of the votes are distributed amongst the top 4. It just goes to show how difficult it is for drivers who are driving less competitive cars to impress. Perhaps because they get very little airtime compared to the frontrunners? Or maybe it’s simply because the top running teams snap up the most talented drivers.
However I think looking a little down the field shows some drivers who may not have made a big splash in the race, but drove incredibly well. After all, it’s a lot easier to get a car that’s supremely quick, well balanced and with high downforce around a race track than one that may not be as easy a drive.
That said, I think Paul Di Resta has has had a cracking start to his F1 career, out-qualifying (and arguably out-racing) his vastly experienced team mate and scoring points in the first two races is a mighty accomplishment for a rookie.
Tango (@tango)
12th April 2011, 10:17
It is hard to believe anyone would vote for somebody who crashed though, wouldn’t it?
topdowntoedown (@topdowntoedown)
12th April 2011, 9:57
Has to be Button for me… a classic drive from him. Quietly got on with the job of getting to the end of the race in the smallest time possible.
gnvour (@)
12th April 2011, 10:15
Hmm, Its really difficult to say with certainty as it has been a massively competitive weekend and very close race. A lot of drivers performed really well and exceeded expectations.
For me it could have been anyone between Vettel, Heidfeld or Button.
But voted for Button in the end because he really beat the race by doing a good job in evaluating all variables perfectly, i.e. pit-stop strategy, tyre degradation, car setup, etc and finding the right balance for him in order to come on top. Am sure this is what every driver is doing during racing, but he did it brilliantly by coming from behind and surprising a few people with his podium finish.
GameR_K (@gamer_k)
12th April 2011, 10:21
Sebastian got my vote but I was tempted to go for either Nick or Mark. Nick might have nicked in Sepang alone, but we are yet to ascertain his consistency. As for Mark it was a brilliant drive with the best moment of the race, the overtaking maneuver on Massa (Apart from the Lewis and Buemi mugging Schumacher – When was the last time we saw 3 cars side by side and it wasn’t even a crash). As for Vettel, you can’t blame him for people around him not challenging him. This was the most exciting race in a very long time, considering the main action was in the midfield, but still enthralling.
sam3110 (@sam3110)
12th April 2011, 11:34
Mugged Schumacher, as he drove into the pits? he had to back off as the dive into the pitlane takes a completely different route into the final corner, and if he didn’t back off there would have been a horrific 3 car crash at about 180 mph, no-one wants to see that
GameR_K (@gamer_k)
12th April 2011, 13:11
Schumacher got mugged before he made it into the pits, he did dive into the pits, but that was an afterthought scenario. Of course there would be a crash if there are 2 cars on either side of you and you keep your foot on the throttle. Who says people don’t watch crashes? Did you close your eyes during Abu Dhabi 20101 – Lap1?
gnvour (@)
12th April 2011, 16:04
So you think that Mercedes changed their strategy 150m before Schumacher was in the pit lane entrance because Buemi passed him? Interesting..
Well I suppose it does makes more sense than the comments that Schumacher was kept out in the track 2/3 laps longer than what he was supposed to while Mercedes was praying for rain in the pit wall.
graigchq
12th April 2011, 11:13
Button. Had it not been for Heidfeld holding up Lewis and letting Vettel get away at the start he would have won the race
smokinjoe (@smokinjoe)
12th April 2011, 11:50
for me its paul di rasta just his second race
MW (@)
12th April 2011, 13:25
“Paul Di Rasta Mon”! I like it Smokinjoe :)
For me it was Vettel, just because we expect him to be flawless doesn’t make it less impressive.. complete dominance.. Having said that, I’d like to see him battle it out without crashing into them.
He’ll have to let them passed before that happens…
AndrewTanner (@andrewtanner)
12th April 2011, 13:34
I agree with you about Vettel. Admiteddly I haven’t voted for him as having drive of the weekend yet this year but his dominance is an achievement in itself.
AndrewTanner (@andrewtanner)
12th April 2011, 13:32
A close one for me this decision…
Heidfeld had a great weekend and worked hard for it, he kept his head down and just got on with it. Given the minimal running they had on Friday that’s a good achievement.
I was also thinking Di Resta. His result should not be over-looked and is only made sweeter by the fact he beat Sutil again.
But in the end I went for Heidfeld :)
smithyF1 (@)
12th April 2011, 14:40
What a great drive from Kobayashi. He got my vote. Obviously Heidfeld was very solid too but there is just something about Kobayashi that I admire. I’d like to see him given a chance in one of the big teams over the next few years, maybe as a Massa replacement at Ferrari?
Himmat S.
12th April 2011, 14:47
Heikki gets me vote. He squeezed out every last bit from the TL128. Methinks if he stays at Lotus for a couple more years, they could forge a brilliant combination similar to the Schumacher-Ferrari era. Go Heikki!
jk
12th April 2011, 15:24
KOBAYASHI all the way for me, an amazing battle with Schumacher and at times “showing him how its done” with some truely stunning overtaking moves, a fantastic driver to watch. Such skill and commitment is inspiring.
Di Resta had a great weekend, the lad shows a lot of promise in a car that is a bit off pace.
Vettel dominated again but I think the McLarens were outwitted on strategy and used up too many tyres in quali ALA HAMILTON.
Cant wait for the weekend again now, China usually throws one or surprises.
sharmin. (@spartle)
12th April 2011, 22:02
Don’t think Vettel has won any of these polls, whether he was the best driver or not. It’s always the excuse of “he had the best car”. Don’t think that can be said for this race though, my vote goes to him.
Muriel Smith
13th April 2011, 18:16
ALONSO WAS UNDOUBTEDLY THE BEST DRIVER OF THE SEPANG GP because:
with regard to who was at fault in the Alonso v Hamilton coming together on lap 46 of the Sepang GP … clearly Martin Brundle and David Coulthard at the time of the ‘collision’ (and shortly after) were being totally premature in their hasty assumption that (and I quote): … ‘it was all Alonso’s fault’ … ‘it was a misjudgement by Alonso’ … ‘yes Alonso has to take 100% responsibility for that’ … when in fact the rear overhead camera at the time of the ‘collision’ (as opposed to all the other camera angles that they were subsequently shown and analysed?) reveals quite clearly that:
Alonso was still hot on Hamilton’s tail and determined to get past him as they both rounded that final sweeping bend … Hamilton brushes against the chevrons on the left of the (very broad) track and then immediately swings out widely to his right to block Alonso from passing … when the same footage is studied in slow-motion we can see that Alonso is closing in and positioning himself just fractionally behind and to the right of the McLaren so that he can pick up the slipstream and make his move on this long clear strait (bearing in mind that his DRS is not functioning?) … then at the crucial moment as Alonso turns sharply to his right to fly past the McLaren we can also discern that Hamilton is simultaneously veering across Alonso’s path??
Let me spell that out again … Hamilton’s car is on the edge of the chevrons as Alonso is right up behind him (but not on the chevrons) … as Alonso turns out sharply to the right the McLaren is already half-a-car-width to the right of the chevrons … a split-second later as the debris from Alonso’s wing is still airborne Hamilton’s car is a full-car-width away from the chevrons … then two-car-widths … this is irrefutable proof that Hamilton swung out in front of Alonso knowing that he was about to pass him and it is this totally indefensible move to the right by Hamilton that resulted in Alonso’s left front wing clipping H’s right rear tyre (and let’s not forget that Brundle had assured us just prior to the ‘collision’ that Hamilton had been really struggling on this last set of tyres and had another 10 laps to go on them, etc?).
Obviously Hamilton was not prepared to give way or yield to Alonso and certainly wasn’t going to let him finally succeed (after a full two minutes of trying) in sublimely and spectacularly overtaking him to steam ahead towards the 3rd podium … he would rather risk Alonso running into the back of him and the Ferrari leaving the ground and launching itself into the air (he must have known just how dangerous it could have been for Alonso) … yes it needs to be said again … it’s Lewis Hamilton who is undoubtedly guilty of ‘causing that particular avoidable collision’ and of ‘making more than one move to defend his position’ (aka ‘weaving’) … in my opinion not only should he have been penalised for both offences (and Alonso completely exonerated from any blame) but in addition Hamilton should have been severely reprimanded by the stewards and penalised for ‘dangerous driving’?!?
Hamilton cannot say in his defence that he didn’t know where Alonso was because he would have seen in his right mirror that the Ferrari was only a hair’s breadth behind him and a fraction to his right (and more importantly TRAVELLING A LOT FASTER THAN HIM BECAUSE OF THE SLIPSTREAM?!?).
Further proof (again in my estimation) of Hamilton’s culpability is that it was glaringly obvious in his post-race interview with Lee Mckenzie that either Hamilton himself or ‘someone’ had specifically instructed her not to ask him about the HvA incident or who he thought was to blame for the ‘collision’, etc … Hamilton isn’t very good at hiding his emotions and his body language/facial expressions and hesitancy all spoke palpable reams … he actually couldn’t speak to Lee for a full three seconds at first and was visibly distressed and struggling to say ‘something’ … until Ms Mckenzie then asked him ‘how disappointed are you?’ to which he seemed relieved that it wasn’t the dreaded question???
Still his speech was stilted and there were long pauses and looking down at the floor before Hamilton answered ‘I don’t want to want to talk about it really’ … he then managed to compose himself after biting his lip … lots of umming and erring and a couple of forced smiles for the camera … then of course we had to listen to his usual batch of excuses to explain why his race was so lousy … sorry but Hamilton looked and acted as guilty as hell and obviously hadn’t had a chance to be briefed/primed about what to say by his ‘team’.
In complete contrast when Ms Mckenzie spoke to Alonso his body language was at the opposite extreme to Hamilton’s … she asked him straight off to talk about the little hit he had with Hamilton and he was quite calm and at ease when he answered her … there was just a shrug of his shoulders and a hint of disappointment in his voice when he explained how they had touched and as a result he had to pit for a new wing which maybe had cost him the podium (all this was said by him without any vestige of blame) … he continued to inform her that he was pleased and surprised with the improvement in the car from Australia and will try again in China, etc.
Please note that:
1) The first part of Hamilton’s post-race interview where he was conspicuously looking anxious/sheepish and tongue-tied was edited out for the BBC’s afternoon race re-run (and the 7pm highlights) and Alonso’s interview wasn’t shown at all (lest perhaps people should spot the distinct difference in their body languages’ and demeanours’ and realise the truth??).
2) McLaren’s Team Principal Martin Whitmarsh was not interviewed to give his opinions on either of his drivers’ races (an inexplicable omission considering that Button came 2nd?) … this omission only serves to strengthen my argument.
3) As I predicted (and Sepang is only the second race of the season) … the pairing of Martin Brundle and David Coulthard in the commentary box would result in Coulthard agreeing with most of what Brundle says and both of them continuing to cover-up/disguise/gloss-over and make light of any ‘mistakes’ made by Hamilton … but conversely jump on anything that Alonso might do that can be construed as (and I quote): … ‘the two-times world champion making a schoolboy error’, etc??
STUDY AND SCRUTINISE THE EVIDENCE PEOPLE BEFORE YOU MAKE YOUR HASTY AND HARMFUL JUDGEMENTS because you probably made it more difficult for the stewards to totally disagree with what you both had so emphatically stated about Alonso being 100% at fault and that Hamilton was just driving along minding his own business, etc! Clearly Mssrs Brundle and Coulthard have vested interests in still trying to portray Hamilton as being the great/fantastic/skilful driver that in fact he never was (or ever has been?) … and of course they continue to (albeit more stealthily nowadays) minimise and under-rate Alonso’s achievements, ie: when Red Bull’s Webber and Renault’s Heidfeld overtook another car in Sepang their moves were described as ‘beautiful’ … no such superlative would ever be used for Alonso because it would literally get stuck in their throats … their glee and euphoria when Alonso had to pit for his new wing was palpable?!?
4) I’ve said it from day one of the 2007 season and my opinion of Hamilton hasn’t changed much since then … he is a harebrained young man and always has been a second-rate/mediocre/immature and reckless F1 driver and he will remain so mainly because he has invariably been positioned on pole or put (yes put?) on the front row at the start of most races … in Australia it worked out brilliantly for him (as indeed in numerous other races over the last four years) … but when he’s not up front (and sometimes even when he is?) … he usually makes at least one cringe-worthy mistake somewhere during the race which his team and certain others are quick to minimise and brush aside!
I will rest my case for now and wait to see what surprises/plans/ploys have been contrived and hatched for the Chinese GP on Sunday!