I have taken so long to write this post about the European Grand Prix because there was so much action, I hardly know where to begin.

I think I might start with Lewis Hamilton, because I predicted that he would have to run into some bad luck sooner or later. And he ran into it big time at the Nürburgring.

Of course there was that crash during qualifying, which was what I believe drivers call a “big one”. It was not Hamilton’s fault, and he was a complete passenger in the accident. And while the crash did not look as scary as Robert Kubica’s at Montreal earlier this year, Hamilton’s impact was exactly the kind that took Michael Schumacher out of the 1999 season with a broken leg at Silverstone.

Come race day and nothing seemed to go right for Hamilton. Some of it was his fault, and some of it wasn’t. For me, this was a major test for Hamilton. We had yet to see him drive in the wet, and we had yet to see him come through the field. He had to do both this weekend, and he did not exactly pass with flying colours.

Coming through the field was not actually much bother for Hamilton. He made several excellent overtaking manoeuvres. He probably made more passes during that race than some drivers will make in an entire season.

But on the wet track he was not so hot. He was one of several drivers to aquaplane off the circuit during the early downpour. And while many joined him in the gravel trap, it should be noted that Massa and Alonso negotiated the corner with no major problem just seconds before Hamilton flew straight off.

He had his brain engaged though, and managed to persuade the marshals to get crane his car back onto the racetrack! It is a bit of the evil exploitation of the rulebook that Michael Schumacher specialised in. It’s not always pretty, but it’s the stuff champions are made of.

Hamilton also had a lacklustre time with his tyre choices. Bad strategy and the trip into the sandpit meant that Hamilton failed to score a point for the first time in his career, even though there was nothing wrong with his car. Evidence that Hamilton still has stuff to learn.

Someone else with stuff to learn is Felipe Massa. He has historically had a reputation as a bit of an erratic, incomplete driver. In the last couple of years, in a tip-top Ferrari car, he has managed to bluff his way to a better reputation. But every so often something happens to remind you that Massa is not yet a complete driver, and possibly never will be.

His is absolutely dire in the wet. Alonso was all over him. And this was a race that Massa had seemingly sewn up. A 4 second lead evaporated in the space of one lap. All it takes is a bit of drizzle, for Massa to become a seriously average racing driver.

The McLaren victory was a complete surprise to me, as I had really thought that Ferrari had the race in the bag. On balance, Ferrari probably have a slightly better car, but there is no doubt that McLaren’s driver line up is much stronger. How many other people would have managed to overtake Massa like that, even in a superior car?

But while Alonso won the race, surely the driver with the most to cheer about was Markus Winkelhock. It was his first ever Formula 1 Grand Prix and he led it for six laps. Okay, so it was mostly down to luck, as a risky tactical masterstroke from the Spyker team saw him starting the race from the pits on intermediate tyres while everyone else was sitting on the grid on slicks.

But Winkelhock kept it on the island while so many others were flying off the circuit, and apparently at one point his lead was 30 seconds. He led from the restart, at which point everyone else ganged up on him. A second risk to put him on extreme wet tyres failed, and he soon found himself dead last apart from Hamilton. Then his car failed.

His moment of glory had come and gone. It looks as though his career may last for just that one race. It would put him in a strange position of having led his début Grand Prix in a grotesquely underperforming car, yet never being invited back. A day to remember for Winkelhock.

The Red Bulls were outstanding. Webber took a rare podium for him, although he almost lost it to Wurz on the penultimate corner! Does anyone else notice how Wurz seems to have a pretty anonymous time in an F1 car, but when he gets a result it is absolutely awesome?

The BMWs were disappointingly poor. They did not help themselves by running into each other at the start. But even taking that into consideration they were strangely off-colour. I wonder if they are slipping behind a bit in terms of development.

The best moment, though, came during the podium ceremony. Hilariously, Michael Schumacher presented Ron Dennis with the Constructor’s trophy. Hahahah! I haven’t laughed so much in ages.

What a championship we now have on our hands though! Hamilton’s 12 point lead has been slashed to a fragile 2 points and the Ferrari resurgence is surely due to kick in at some point.

3 comments

  1. [...] was another reason why the European Grand Prix was great. It brought the one-off return of Murray Walker, commentating on an F1 race for a UK [...]

  2. You missed the fact that the much-hyped Raikkonen yet again proved that he cannot overtake – stuck behind the much slower renault of Kovalinen

  3. victor

    i would say massa was just lucky to have controlled his car frm goin into the gravel first even he admitted to it that he almost lost control at that corner and what happened to lewis was just bad luck…remember at the start he was 4th at one point but then had the tire puncture and i believe if not for that puncture he would have had his 10th podium finish in a row but yeah thats life he has had his share of badluck at least he(lewis) said it that come one day durin the 2007 season he would end up not havin a podium finish,and saying its a bit of evil that he left his engine running while others didnt is just wrong,if the others had their engines runnin they would have gotten the same treatment hamilton got,and sayin hamilton has a lot to learn is right because he is still a rookie which some of u dont seem to understand,remember hamilton was a lap down and still finished in 9th place which i think was a wonderful performance by him because not alot of drivers would be able to pull that off,and laughing at the fact that schumi handed the trophy to the mclaren’s…well i would like to let you know that out of the whole ferrari crew it was only schumi that agreed that alonso’s pass was fair cuz the other thought it wasnt a fair pass and that it was alonso that hit massa but schumi was the only one to disagree……no disrespect but i think your opinion is kind of biased and not fair,hamilton and schumi are the only two guys that have ever been lifted off the gravel to continue the race because they were reasonable enough to keep the engine running and any1 that thinks that is wrong is absolutely wrong because that is an absolute legal move according to the FIA so once again i wont deny the fact that alonso is the master for now,but u never know how the season would end and come 2008 there would be a new and more experienced lewis hamilton,soon he would be the unstoppable and biggest rival to all other drivers,he already is becoming a threat to most of the drivers and this is just his first year,none of these drivers have done what he has done so far in their first year,my opinion i think lewis knows how to control himself under pressure than alonso does,2007 montreal gp proves it all,alonso went off track more than once in a completely perfect weather,alonso only pushes hard when he is among the first 3rd but if not he always seems to make mistakes that he could avoid,but i wont deny the fact that he is an exceptional driver and is one of the best when it comes to overtakes….thats my opinion