There are many
clichés about the Monaco Grand Prix and one of the most
commonly cited is that this race is a lottery. Sometimes,
people who play real lotteries have a strategy and the same
is true of the teams as they prepare for the most famous
race on the Formula 1 calendar.
The overall responsibility for strategic decisions taken on
the Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro pit wall rests with the team's
Head of Track Operations, Luca Baldisserri, who gives us an
insight to the seemingly endless possibilities for running
the best race around this tricky track. "Monte Carlo is
probably the most difficult venue at which to plan
strategy," says Baldisserri. "Because you always have to
balance the need to be in front of the other cars, to have
free air and to avoid traffic especially at the start,
against on the other hand, the need to have more fuel to
avoid bouncing back into traffic after your pit stop,
running behind the slower car that was originally behind
you. If that car is on a different strategy to yours, it can
destroy your race."
A further complication for 2007 comes from the rules
concerning the use of tyres in that you have to use both
types of tyre provided at some point in the race. "We have
been testing the super-soft and the soft tyres that
Bridgestone brings to this race," explains Baldisserri.
"Paul Ricard, where we tested them last week, was not the
best venue for this tyre comparison as we could not
establish enough of a difference because the super-soft
struggled slightly towards the end of a lap. We will have to
therefore adapt our Thursday programme to establish which
tyre really is the quickest. This will be especially
important looking towards qualifying but also for the race."
This year, there is a rule change concerning the Safety Car:
when it is out on track after an incident, the pit lane will
now be closed. Our race planner outlines the implications of
this rule. "It reduces our flexibility in strategic terms as
we cannot change our strategy and bring our car into the
pits. Last year, there was an SC period after the mid-point
of the race. When this happened the front runners were
unaffected because they pitted and refuelled to the end of
the race. This year, that will not be possible and if the SC
comes out when you have five laps of fuel remaining, then
they have to keep going. If you decide your car must pit,
then you take a penalty which must be purged back in the
pits only after the Safety Car has pulled off the track and
the race is again underway.
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A further complication for 2007 comes from the rules
concerning the use of tyres in that you have to use
both types of tyre provided at some point in the
race. Photo: Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen with
the Ferrari F2007 in Monte Carlo yesterday. |
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There are many clichés about the Monaco Grand Prix
and one of the most commonly cited is that this race
is a lottery. Photo: Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen
with the Ferrari F2007 in Monte Carlo yesterday. |
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"This also destroys your race of course. This means the most
flexible strategy in terms of avoiding a negative outcome of
a Safety Car period is to reduce the number of pit stops.
Like this you carry less risk. However it means you must run
a car with a heavy fuel load. That in turn means you will
pay the price in qualifying and you can get stuck in traffic
in the early stages of the race and if nothing unusual
happens in the race then you run the risk of finding that
your strategy is too safe and you cannot win the race."
However, when a team is chasing championship titles, a
conservative and safe strategy is really not an option. "We
definitely want to win this race, because we have not
succeeded in winning in Monte Carlo since 2001," maintains
Baldisserri. "I think this will involve a lot of hard work
to decide what to do and it will be really important to run
a good practice programme on Thursday. So yes, it is an
absolute lottery, but the odds can be a bit in your favour
if you have a quick car. You can then use the performance
margin to help you run a conservative strategy, but as we
have seen in the races so far this season, no one team
really has that margin and it will be a real fight in
qualifying between us and our rivals. Monaco is a track that
requires a lot of effort from the drivers, as the walls are
close, you have to be precise and also very quick."
A further complication might come from the weather, as the
forecast is for bad conditions especially on Saturday which
is therefore yet another variable to further complicate the
strategy programme! Another factor is that some sections of
the Monaco street track have been resurfaced. "We will have
to see what grip characteristics we get from this new
tarmac," concludes Baldisserri. "In terms of the car, as
usual, we adapt the steering on the F2007 as there are some
very tight corners and we need more steering lock than
normal and of course we have some improvements on the car to
increase the downforce that you need here."
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