Kimi Raikkonen hailed his Bahrain Grand Prix strategy as “perfect” after snatching second place from Nico Rosberg.
Bahrain Grand Prix tyre strategies
The tyre strategies for each driver:
Stint 1 | Stint 2 | Stint 3 | Stint 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Lewis Hamilton | Soft (15) | Soft (18) | Medium (24) | |
Kimi Raikkonen | Soft (17) | Medium (23) | Soft (17) | |
Nico Rosberg | Soft (14) | Soft (20) | Medium (23) | |
Valtteri Bottas | Soft (14) | Soft (19) | Medium (24) | |
Sebastian Vettel | Soft (13) | Soft (19) | Medium (4) | Medium (21) |
Daniel Ricciardo | Soft (14) | Soft (21) | Medium (22) | |
Romain Grosjean | Soft (12) | Soft (19) | Medium (26) | |
Sergio Perez | Soft (17) | Soft (20) | Medium (19) | |
Daniil Kvyat | Soft (15) | Soft (19) | Medium (22) | |
Felipe Massa | Soft (10) | Soft (14) | Medium (32) | |
Fernando Alonso | Soft (13) | Medium (22) | Soft (21) | |
Felipe Nasr | Soft (10) | Soft (14) | Soft (17) | Medium (15) |
Nico Hulkenberg | Soft (10) | Soft (15) | Medium (13) | Medium (18) |
Marcus Ericsson | Soft (11) | Soft (14) | Soft (12) | Medium (19) |
Pastor Maldonado | Medium (10) | Soft (14) | Soft (17) | Soft (15) |
Will Stevens | Soft (19) | Soft (14) | Medium (22) | |
Roberto Merhi | Soft (18) | Soft (16) | Medium (20) | |
Max Verstappen | Soft (6) | Medium (24) | Soft (4) | |
Carlos Sainz Jnr | Soft (11) | Medium (18) |
While most drivers postponed their stint on the slower medium tyres until the end of the race, Raikkonen got his out of the way in the middle stint. This paid off handsomely, for as well as lapping close to the pace of race leader Lewis Hamilton, who was on the faster soft tyres, Raikkonen was able to push harder on the soft tyres in the final stint.
After rejoining the track on soft tyres for his final stint on lap 41, Raikkonen took ten seconds out of the Mercedes in five laps – an astonishing rate. Rosberg’s late brake problem handed him second place – but he had been poised to pressure the Mercedes driver hard for the position until the flag.
Lotus gave Pastor Maldonado the quickest service of the grand prix but he also suffered the race’s longest pit stop when his engine kill switch incorrectly activated during his final stop.
Bahrain Grand Prix pit stop times
How long each driver’s pit stops took:
Driver | Team | Pit stop time | Gap | On lap | |
1 | Pastor Maldonado | Lotus | 24.310 | 24 | |
2 | Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 24.449 | 0.139 | 32 |
3 | Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 24.509 | 0.199 | 13 |
4 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 24.528 | 0.218 | 33 |
5 | Kimi Raikkonen | Ferrari | 24.547 | 0.237 | 40 |
6 | Valtteri Bottas | Williams | 24.623 | 0.313 | 33 |
7 | Nico Hulkenberg | Force India | 24.679 | 0.369 | 25 |
8 | Daniil Kvyat | Red Bull | 24.692 | 0.382 | 34 |
9 | Romain Grosjean | Lotus | 24.735 | 0.425 | 12 |
10 | Kimi Raikkonen | Ferrari | 24.773 | 0.463 | 17 |
11 | Fernando Alonso | McLaren | 24.878 | 0.568 | 35 |
12 | Felipe Massa | Williams | 24.894 | 0.584 | 10 |
13 | Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull | 24.943 | 0.633 | 35 |
14 | Nico Hulkenberg | Force India | 24.979 | 0.669 | 38 |
15 | Felipe Massa | Williams | 25.017 | 0.707 | 24 |
16 | Romain Grosjean | Lotus | 25.259 | 0.949 | 31 |
17 | Sergio Perez | Force India | 25.288 | 0.978 | 37 |
18 | Valtteri Bottas | Williams | 25.293 | 0.983 | 14 |
19 | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes | 25.311 | 1.001 | 14 |
20 | Fernando Alonso | McLaren | 25.370 | 1.060 | 13 |
21 | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes | 25.418 | 1.108 | 34 |
22 | Daniil Kvyat | Red Bull | 25.421 | 1.111 | 15 |
23 | Felipe Nasr | Sauber | 25.459 | 1.149 | 10 |
24 | Sergio Perez | Force India | 25.573 | 1.263 | 17 |
25 | Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull | 25.723 | 1.413 | 14 |
26 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 25.791 | 1.481 | 15 |
27 | Roberto Merhi | Manor | 25.834 | 1.524 | 18 |
28 | Felipe Nasr | Sauber | 25.898 | 1.588 | 24 |
29 | Marcus Ericsson | Sauber | 26.042 | 1.732 | 37 |
30 | Marcus Ericsson | Sauber | 26.045 | 1.735 | 11 |
31 | Will Stevens | Manor | 26.103 | 1.793 | 19 |
32 | Felipe Nasr | Sauber | 26.210 | 1.900 | 41 |
33 | Will Stevens | Manor | 26.479 | 2.169 | 33 |
34 | Carlos Sainz Jnr | Toro Rosso | 26.593 | 2.283 | 29 |
35 | Nico Hulkenberg | Force India | 26.652 | 2.342 | 10 |
36 | Max Verstappen | Toro Rosso | 27.225 | 2.915 | 30 |
37 | Roberto Merhi | Manor | 27.573 | 3.263 | 34 |
38 | Pastor Maldonado | Lotus | 30.426 | 6.116 | 10 |
39 | Carlos Sainz Jnr | Toro Rosso | 32.647 | 8.337 | 11 |
40 | Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 33.921 | 9.611 | 36 |
41 | Max Verstappen | Toro Rosso | 39.338 | 15.028 | 6 |
42 | Marcus Ericsson | Sauber | 49.162 | 24.852 | 25 |
43 | Pastor Maldonado | Lotus | 107.394 | 83.084 | 41 |
2015 Bahrain Grand Prix
- Sponsor watch: 2015 Chinese & Bahrain Grands Prix
- 2015 Bahrain GP Predictions Championship results
- Ferrari’s Mercedes challenge enlivens 2015 contest
- 2015 Bahrain Grand Prix team radio transcript
- Top ten pictures from the 2015 Bahrain Grand Prix
Bolide (@mim5)
19th April 2015, 23:41
what happens next time if Mercedes pit first?
Key (@key75)
20th April 2015, 0:02
That’s the real question! Mercedes are no longer in the back foot like in Malaysia. They keep a close look on Ferrari’s pace and strategy (and you can see it also by the amount of tweets they make about them lol). So they need to find a way to surprise them again or Mercedes “still” better pace will win always.
Key (@key75)
20th April 2015, 18:14
Another prove Mercedes is keeping a really close look, specially after Malaysia where they didn’t took Ferrari’s pace in FP2 seriously.
golson (@golson)
20th April 2015, 1:01
I seems that Merc is spending a lot of time reacting to Ferrari’s moves. If they want to take the championship, they need to make Ferrari follow their moves.
Patrickl (@patrickl)
20th April 2015, 9:41
That makes no sense. They don’t need to take risks and they can simply cover Ferrari to win the race.
If they start taking risks they might pick the wrong strategy and lose. Why would they do that?
Clark Finlay (@ck2000)
20th April 2015, 13:29
Hard to say that they would, the undercut is useful if you are behind but requires the driver to be more gentle on the tires as it increases the length the next stint. If Mercedes are out in front they will be racing to an agreed plan determined by the best predicted outcome. If they are in the lead by a few seconds (which is normally where a car of roughly equal pace will sit due to not wanting to damage their tires) and Mercedes decide to pit, the car following can simply follow them in if its not another Mercedes and remove the benefit of the undercut
Philip (@philipgb)
20th April 2015, 0:21
Kimi’s undoing this season is going to be qualifying. His long run pace has been a match and occasionally better than Vettel, but if he can’t get track position it’s being wasted.
Kimi lost time in the race behind Vettel and looking how close he was to Hamilton in the end I think the win was very much possible.
It’s interesting after Kimi’s very Kimilike casual I’m going to try for the pass radio message we didn’t hear one to Vettel not to hold him up. Any other team and we’d have heard them telling him they were on differing tyre strategies, don’t hold him up. I’m curious if it just wasn’t broadcast or if Ferrari didn’t make a call.
Sven (@crammond)
20th April 2015, 1:54
@philipgb Wasn´t that before the 1st pit-stops, when they were still on the same strategy? Wouldn´t be surprised if Vettel and Raikkonen have just agreed on not listening to any team-order anyway. As they are direct neighbours, I guess they had time to talk about that during the winter.
Also interesting: Shortly after Kimi´s stop, which put him on prime, there was a team-radio to Rosberg “We´re going target+10”, meaning Merc initially planned 3 stops.
Alexander (@)
20th April 2015, 9:21
You shouldn’t really believe anything you hear on those radios.. I think the teams knew it was pretty clear that 2 stops was the only clever strategy.
Virender Singh (@vjskang)
20th April 2015, 13:59
Ferrari was having No Intention of let Kimi Pass Vettel(Which they Believe is there Trump Card). If Vettel hasn’t damaged the front Wing, he Would have been 3rd with Kimi 4th.
Kimi don’t take risk while overtaking – he has calm down with age. VET incident did help Kimi as that provided him the window to show his talent – which he did.
But I can bet over the season you will see Kimi Being Overshadowed in Ferrari and only Vettel will be favored.
rm
20th April 2015, 16:17
So far qualifying behind Vettel is working out well for him. Seb is used early in the race to aggressively undercut the Mercs and force them to pit early, while Kimi hangs back saving his fuel and tyres for the second half of the race. I don’t know if that’s a deliberate decision on Ferrari’s part but that’s the way things have played out a number of times already this season.
As long as Merc have the faster car this works to Kimi’s advantage. If at some stage Ferrari catch or surpass Mercedes for speed then this same scenario will play to Seb’s advantage.
rm
20th April 2015, 18:11
He really didn’t. There was only one lap (10, I think) where he might have lost a couple of tenths behind Vettel before Seb sped up.
Daniel (@dstaplet13)
20th April 2015, 1:13
I was wondering why Massa was losing positions at the end of the race, his tires were 32 laps old!
q85
20th April 2015, 7:21
Kimi’s strategy was good but it wasn’t perfect. His tyres had plenty of meat left at the end as he was catching lewis, so they should of pitted him much earlier. For a few laps he was so slow, so slow Alonso passed him. He would of lost at least a net 6+ seconds in staying out for just 2 of those laps compared to new tyres. That time could of given him the win.
Its interesting to see kimi up there now the car is good… All i kept thinking in that race was Ferrari let that one get away.
RV (@zenren)
20th April 2015, 7:44
I think they did it much closer to perfection than we think. The really slow laps we saw in turn helped save fuel which is another limiting factor in the race. Ferrari ensured that the fresh softs were not sacrificed for fuel saving by staying on mediums a couple of laps more than what would have been ideal from tyre strategy perspective. Kimi ended up using more fuel than others by the time he caught up with the Mercedes pair due those lightning fast laps. It was pretty close in the end with respect to Kimi’s fuel usage and I’m not sure if he would have been able to push as much if he started one lap earlier.
Patrickl (@patrickl)
20th April 2015, 9:54
Raikkonen was doing laps in the 1:39 range when he was overtaken by Alonso. At the end of the race Raikkonen was doing laps in the 1:38 range. So at best he would have saved a 1 or perhaps 2 seconds if he’d had stopped earlier and if nothing else changed.
Trouble is that with the length of the stint other things change too. You also need to account for the longer stint and that would have meant that Raikkonen would have had to go slower to preserve his tyres. In the end I doubt he would have actually gained any significant time by stopping earlier.
It only looked silly because Alonso had just come out on a fresh set of tyres and was setting his fastest laps of the race. It’s the ridiculously gimmicky 3 second laptime difference between the different tyres that made it look bad for Ferrari.
Boetie Jan
20th April 2015, 9:34
I for one thought of the possibility that Raikkonen could have backed Hamilton into Rosberg before he (Kimi) pitted for the last time. Thereby ensuring he could have caught both Mercs. But I think not, he would not have been able to keep Hamilton behind him at that stage.
HK (@me4me)
20th April 2015, 16:20
Massively impressed by the Ferrari pit crew. They did a great job.
kpcart
20th April 2015, 18:02
It was not a “perfect strategy” – the strategy for Kimi, yes it worked, but it was chosen as a second choise because kimi was so slow compared to Vettel and Merc at the start – it was a lucked in result – it could not be predicted, he was not that fast, and then the strategy choice suddenly made him faster… maybe ferrari can use the data from Kimi’s 2nd choice strategy and give this second choice strategy to Vettel in the next race and they will win instead of coming 2nd.
bright (@bright)
20th April 2015, 21:27
that is the silliest thing I have ever heard ….
John H (@john-h)
21st April 2015, 19:57
Pastor’s pit stop times. From the sublime to the ridiculous.