Vote for your 2015 United States Grand Prix Driver of the Weekend

2015 United States Grand Prix

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Which F1 driver was the best performer during the United States Grand Prix weekend?

Review how each driver got on below and vote for who impressed you the most during the last race weekend.

United States Grand Prix driver-by-driver

Mercedes

Lewis Hamilton – Brushed Rosberg aside at turn one but came under pressure from his team mate and the Red Bulls before switching to slick tyres. When the track dried he moved up to second but had dropped back from Rosberg when his team mate went off, handing him the lead and cementing his third world title.

Nico Rosberg – Has he regained his qualifying form of last year? This was his third pole position in a row, but he lost the initiative quickly to another robust move from his team mate. Got back past the Red Bulls into second, then fell behind Ricciardo, but regained the lead when the track dried. Was on course for a badly-needed win when the car cot away from his with eight laps to go.

Red Bull

Ricciardo hit the front after passing Hamilton
Daniel Ricciardo – Vindicated Red Bull’s decision not to use the new Red Bull engine and avoid a grid penalty by qualifying third and passing the Mercedes drivers to lead. When the track dried Red Bull were vulnerable, but Ricciardo was unfortunate to be hit by both Hulkenberg and Sainz, leaving him tenth at the flag. Had it stayed wet a win was on.

Daniil Kvyat – Lined up alongside Ricciardo and got ahead of him at the start, but had a rough ride from there on. Went off trying to pass Rosberg, dropped back much more quickly than Ricciardo as the moisture dissipated, and eventually spun into a wall.

Williams

Felipe Massa – Incurred Alonso’s wrath by punting him into a spin at the start, and dropped out soon afterwards with a damper problem.

Valtteri Bottas – Was quick in the very wet final practice session, but Sunday was a wasted effort. Technical trouble in qualifying kept him out of the top ten, and another fault put him out of the race.

Ferrari

Vettel fought his way up to the podium
Sebastian Vettel – Relegated to 13th on the grid by an engine change penalty, Vettel started superbly to take seventh, then soon passed Hulkenberg. Made an early switch to slicks which got him ahead of Perez, motored past the Red Bulls with little difficulty, and initially gambled on a long final stint on medium tyres which could have worked out very well had there been no further Safety Cars. But there was, and although he took the opportunity to put new softs on later, he narrowly failed to demote Rosberg for second.

Kimi Raikkonen – Started further back than Vettel but after two laps there was just one car separating them. This was Verstappen, who Raikkonen complained about on the radio. He stayed out a lap longer than the Toro Rosso before switching to softs, but spun into a barrier one lap after pitting. Although he managed to drag his car back onto the track, a damaged brake duct forced him out.

McLaren

Fernando Alonso – Running McLaren’s new engine, Alonso started ninth partly thanks to others’ penalties, but his race was ruined by Massa at the start. A long 30-lap run on softs at the end left him vulnerable to those who pitted but it was a developing problem with his engine which finally saw off his chance of points.

Jenson Button – McLaren went the other way with Button at the end of the race, giving him a new set of softs with a dozen laps to go. He made great use of them, overcoming the McLaren’s weaknesses with passes on Ricciardo and Sainz. The latter eventually got back ahead, but Button stayed close enough to be promoted up to sixth by Sainz’s five-second penalty.

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Force India

Nico Hulkenberg – Lost places early on when he ran wide in turns 16/17/18, but showed his usual excellent touch with slicks on a damp track to move ahead of his team mate and Sainz. However a front wing failure while trying to pass Ricciardo left him powerless to avoid contact, and the result was his third retirement in four races.

Sergio Perez – Out-qualified Hulkenberg and started fifth. That was where he finished too, though he probably should have been able to keep Verstappen behind.

Toro Rosso

Verstappen reached Q3 and matched his best race result
Max Verstappen – Ran in the top ten for the entire race and got as high as third as he tried to coax a set of soft tyres throughout the entire second half of the race. He was aided by a spate of interruptions – just seven laps of green flag running between laps 27 and 46 – but nonetheless he held his own among some of F1’s biggest names.

Carlos Sainz Jnr – Crashed in qualifying but having started last he was tenth by lap two. Despite being delayed by a slow pit stop due to a wheel nut problem, and picking up a pit lane speeding penalty, he claimed points for seventh place. Moving across on Ricciardo in the braking zone for turn 12 was questionable, however.

Lotus

Romain Grosjean – Another frustrating weekend in which he chalked up yet another qualifying win against his team mate but his race was ruined by a rival on the first lap.

Pastor Maldonado – Stayed out of trouble on his way to eighth place but was puzzled as to why he didn’t have better pace.

Sauber

Ericsson was the first to make slicks work
Marcus Ericsson – He was the first driver to switch to slicks and make it work, but Ericsson gained little from his gamble and retired shortly afterwards with duff electronics.

Felipe Nasr – Both Sauber drivers had a lot of work to do at an unfamiliar circuit, but despite taking points for ninth Sauber team principal Monisha Kaltenborn was unhappy after Nasr hit Ericsson on lap one. “It is not an excuse that one driver did not know the track before and we were not able to run many laps here,” she said.

Manor

Will Stevens – Didn’t figure after being hit at the first corner, retiring with damage.

Alexander Rossi – Out-qualified Stevens, and problems for Sainz and Raikkonen elevated him to 17th on the grid. Ran ahead of Nasr until a Safety Car period allowed the Sauber to catch up, and was elevated to 12th by retirements, equalling Manor’s best result of the year.

I say

Both Mercedes drivers slipped up during the race, so while they occupied the top two places on the road there were others who impressed me most.

Vettel did a particularly good job patiently working his way through the field from 13th, and was no less impressive for it being exactly what we’ve come to expect of him this year – he now has twelve podiums to his team mate’s two.

Much as in Hungary, Ricciardo drove brilliantly once he was given the chance to shine but was the victim of misfortune. Had the race conditions been more like practice and qualifying he surely would have won. Button also made the best of the opportunities he had and produced his best result of the year.

But the stand-out driver for me was Verstappen. He left his team mate behind in qualifying and fought with the front-runners in the race, once again showing maturity beyond his years.



Qualifying and race results summary

DriverStartedGap to team mate (Q)Laps leading team matePittedFinishedGap to team mate (R)
Lewis Hamilton2nd31/5621st-2.85s
Nico Rosberg1st25/5622nd+2.85s
Daniel Ricciardo3rd24/41310th
Daniil Kvyat4th17/412
Felipe Massa7th4/51
Valtteri Bottas16th1/52
Sebastian Vettel13th24/2533rd
Kimi Raikkonen18th1/252
Fernando Alonso9th5/56311th+26.758s
Jenson Button11th51/5637th-26.758s
Nico Hulkenberg6th14/352
Sergio Perez5th21/3525th
Max Verstappen8th54/5624th-3.26s
Carlos Sainz Jnr20th2/5636th+3.26s
Romain Grosjean10th0/102
Pastor Maldonado12th10/1038th
Marcus Ericsson14th25/252
Felipe Nasr15th0/2559th
Will Stevens19th0/10
Alexander Rossi17th1/1312th

Review the race data

Vote for your driver of the weekend

Which driver do you think did the best job this weekend?

Cast your vote below and explain your choice in the comments.

Who was the best driver of the 2015 United States Grand Prix weekend?

  • Alexander Rossi (1%)
  • Will Stevens (0%)
  • Felipe Nasr (0%)
  • Marcus Ericsson (0%)
  • Pastor Maldonado (0%)
  • Romain Grosjean (0%)
  • Carlos Sainz Jnr (3%)
  • Max Verstappen (38%)
  • Sergio Perez (2%)
  • Nico Hulkenberg (0%)
  • Jenson Button (10%)
  • Fernando Alonso (1%)
  • Kimi Raikkonen (0%)
  • Sebastian Vettel (27%)
  • Valtteri Bottas (0%)
  • Felipe Massa (0%)
  • Daniil Kvyat (0%)
  • Daniel Ricciardo (3%)
  • Nico Rosberg (1%)
  • Lewis Hamilton (12%)

Total Voters: 646

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Author information

Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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162 comments on “Vote for your 2015 United States Grand Prix Driver of the Weekend”

  1. What a driver this Max Verstappen is going to be – he even got Kimi asking about the rules.
    Great overtaking – kept cool – did not put a foot wrong.
    Yes – Lewis did good as well – but he has the car to go with that.

    1. Meh. Going from 8th to 4th isn’t much of an achievement compared to Vettel’s P13 to P3 drive.
      Max was good but Vettel was better.

      1. @kairat you can’t compare the two. Vettel has a Ferrari and Max has a Toro Rosso. Max couldn’t have finished higher, simply due to car performance differences.

        1. So? Vettel couldn’t have finished higher either, so they both get maximum possible results for them in this race. BUt in the end Max gained only 4 places in the race while Vettel gained 10.

          1. You can’t judge the quality of a drive solely by the number of places they make up

          2. What an odd metric to judge how good a drive it was. I’m sure if Max had started last on the grid, it would have made up more than 10 places. You’re almost marking him down for driver of the weekend for having a decent qualifying! As I said… odd.

          3. What a bunch of “odd” fans…. They sound so illogical that you get awestruck unable to put together a sentence for a moment there. They completely abandon the rational way of thinking. Verstappen has some of the most irrational supporters.

          4. @kairat So? Sainz made up 14 places (prior to his 5 sec penalty). Indeed, Sainz binned it in qualifying, so doesn’t deserve DotW, but then again Vettel was VERY fortunate not to damage his car when he kissed the barrier in quali. I agree, Vettel did a great job (he’s my number 2 DotW) and got the most out of the car in the race, as did Verstappen. But I’d say Max did more than “getting the maximum possible result”, putting in some ballsy moves – both offensive and defensive – and just showing that stand-out spark and hunger.

          5. What moves though? Sainz had far more overtakes. And an overall better race. That’s despite a slow pit stop, a problematic pit limiter, and a worse race strategy.

        2. MV qualified 10th in a high downforce car in wet conditions. In those conditions they were pretty much on par with Ferrari actually. Certainly he should have been faster than Force India or at least Williams of all people. So, no big Ferrari car performance difference there. After it dried out, Ferrari got faster as we saw anyway. Naturally Vettel got seriously faster as well. There was nothing miraculous there. Actually, when they went onto slicks on damp/drying track, he was clearly a lot slower than Vettel, also slower than Hulkenberg and on par with Alonso on a drying track. And it wasn’t that Ferrari or Force India was excellent in those conditions, since Raikkonen and Perez was a lot slower than them. And I mean A LOT.

          1. Nothing special about only having done 2 fast laps before qualifying, being pretty flawless in treacherous conditions, and not being able to do any set up work to a car and yet managing option tyres to the limit at the end of course?

            If MV would have had a high downforce rain set up, he would have ended up the same as the Red Bulls. Him losing time at the end was because they decided to let CS pit and not him (so CS had a better change to get more points). The team thought MV was able to keep 4th place on his old tyres, so they took the risky strategy of letting CS pit first with SC2 (after that it was too late for MV to go also without losing places).

      2. And both only did it because of the Safety Cars. Without them, I think Vettel was more likely to finish in 4th. Verstappen also benefited greatly by the issues Red Bull and Williams faced.

        1. No. Vettel was at worst going to finish 3rd. He might have won the GP if there wasn’t a 2nd round of SCs though.

      3. Agree. I liked Verstappen’s drive best, but Vettel’s drive was the best.

    2. What a driver this Max Verstappen is going to be

      What a great driver he already is, more like! :) Give him a top car and he will be another Vettel, no doubt about that.

      1. ^that was meant to be a quote but I suck.

      2. Give him a top car and he will be another Vettel, no doubt about that.

        Except that Hamilton and Vettel both get slated for winning in a better car. So if you give Max a good car, he won’t be nearly as good a driver, according to the “logic” around here.

        Never mind the fact that only 10 times in the last 57 years has the constructor’s championship NOT been shared with the driver’s championship (or the fact that of the current grid, Hamilton is the only one who’s done it), if you have a really good car, you can’t be considered a great driver.

      3. He reminds me of Vettel a lot.

        1. Me too, and what’s interesting is that my friend who took me to the race was telling me beforehand that I’d be able to pick out differences in driving style much more easily in person than watching at home on TV. That seemed to be true, and nowhere was it more apparent than in the esses. I watched a good portion of the race in and around that area, and BY FAR the two drivers who looked magical through that section were Vettel and Verstappen. Where other drivers made very gradual arcing turns following the curves of the track, those two seemed to hit the apex of each turn and their car would just pivot as if it were on a turntable. It reminded me of descriptions I’d read of how Vettel was able to use the blown diffuser to his advantage in the Red Bull years. I could never really see what was described watching on TV, but in person there was a clear difference to his and Verstappen’s driving at least in that section of track on that day. I’m not at all surprised that those two had such a good race nor that they’re the two leading this poll. That matches what I saw on Sunday.

    3. Verstappen did like nothing whole race. His teammate was on his tail in a couple of laps, but dunno what his problem was as always… He nursed a set of tyres, so that’s the DOTW? You’d think he did something more extraordinary in a wet weekend with such a high downforce car…

    4. Verstappen’s teammate was A LOT more impressive during the race. He got the penalty because his pit limiter wasn’t working. But he had the incident in quali. So I cannot give either of them.
      But in any case SebVet was his superb self as usual. He gets overlooked a lot I feel. Went for him. I’d say unlucky not to win… I don’t wanna hear about “he cannot win if he’s not at front” again either. Those 3 + Button was the best imo.

    5. Verstappen was so great that he had a pace matching McLaren and Williams in wet!

    6. Unfortuntely for Max, despite his lowly finishing position, his teammate had a better race.

      1. Sainz had a good start and was in lap 2 only 2 places behind Verstappen (only Raikkonen between them). In lap 4 there was only 1.2 seconds between them.

        So tell me, why didn’t Sainz ended up ahead of Verstappen if he had a better race (the slow pit stop time lost got neutralized by a SC) ?

        If a driver has a better race, he ends up ahead of the other driver when he’s really close behind the other driver in the first few laps. If it hadn’t been for Verstappen being able to manage his tyres that well in the last stint, and by so being able to hold on to 4th place without having to pit under SC2, the team would have needed to let Verstappen pit right away under SC2 and Sainz would have had to wait another lap (Verstappen being able to hold on 4th with his old tyres helped Sainz actually)…it was not a bad race of Sainz, but apart from steering around the trouble in the first lap, he got helped a lot by how well Verstappen can manage his tyres. Sainz’s good race got helped a lot in in the end by the team having an extra strategic option to not having to pit under the SC2 because of Verstappen being able to give that to them.

    7. Overtakes:
      Sainz: 8
      Vettel: 6
      Rosberg: 6
      Alonso, Ricciardo: 5
      Nasr, Verstappen: 4
      Button, Raikkonen: 3
      Hülkenberg, Massa, Grosjean, Rossi, Hamilton: 2
      Perez, Kvyat, Ericsson, Maldonado: 1
      Bottas, Stevens: 0

      Most overtaken: Ricciardo: 11, Button: 6, Kvyat: 6

      1. Can we just look at MISTAKES instead of overtakes?
        Overtaking with a faster car is easy – it is avoiding mistakes that matters more.
        Carlos made many mistakes – hence his grid position.
        Even Vettel made mistakes and was on occasions at every end of the track.
        Ad Tiberius mentioned – even Raikonen forgot the rules because of Max Verstappen.
        Verstappen did a flawless race and made an impossible 4th because of his driving and lack of mistakes.
        No one in the race can claim that one – except Lewis of course – he was flawless too – but had the better car.
        And if you really want to compare drivers – then please look at amount of races driven and experiences – then you really have to give it to Max.
        I agree – Lewis and Vettel are 7 times worldchampions – Max is his 16th F1 race ever.
        Its a no brainer really.

        1. I wish you wouldn’t make things up like Verstappen didn’t make mistakes. He had a great race already, no need for hyperbole. At the end of their inter stint, Toro Rosso was visibly in better condition than Ferrari and looked quite fast. Watch Vettel vs Verstappen and it is obvious. And if you watched that you wouldn’t be saying “Max didn’t make any mistakes unlike Vettel” or something. They were both quite good.

          1. You’re just assuming the Toro Rosso was in a better condition as the Ferrari at that time. I just wish you didn’t try and downplay what simply could have been good driving by trying to make the impression about the cars being in different condition…for all we know, the Ferrari was in a better condition.

            Verstappen has a very different driving style as Vettel. Where Vettel uses the whole of the track in a corner running very wide on the exit, Verstappen goes to the apex right away and looks for a very straight line out of the corner from the apex to go on full throttle as quickly as possible (similar as Hamilton), hence you think the Toro Rosso was in a better shape, but no way in telling by just looking at the video.

  2. My favorite driver, who I follow since he’s 13, has just turned into a three-time world champion of my favorite sport and I didn’t even voted for him this weekend, I just gave my voice to another three-time world champion – even fourth – Sebastian Vettel. The Ferrari driver has a vista, a lecture of the game that still surprises me.

    1. yeah, Seb was great but i expected him to try to win; i don’t think he should have pitted
      Max was great also; he gives me butterflies every time he’s close to the car ahead in a braking zone.
      But i gave my vote to Jenson this time. He made up more places than Max with what we know was definitely an inferior machine to everybody around him … including Fernando.

      1. If Ferrari didn’t pit they would have older tyres than anyone around them and 0 sec advantage with V/SC coming out. They did exactly the right thing by pitting. There was no way to win after last 2 SCs.

      2. I found the decision strange at the time also but I see their reasoning. He wouldn’t have held off the Mercedes on old mediums.

      3. @ianbond001

        My vote also went to Button. He did a lot better than he should have, even with the attrition.

        Very close behind were Vettel and Verstappen. Both had amazing weekends. I just couldn’t help favouring the underdog, though.

    2. +1 Yeah. Man, he’s good.

      1. Love to see Ham vs Vet 2016.

  3. Was going to give it to Sainz for starting from the back and taking 11 places in two laps but a penalty for speeding in the pit lane ruined it. Verstappen had a great drive but didn’t particularly do anything memorable in my opinion compared to other races which is why I went for Vettel, who recovered from 13th and was brave to go for mediums

    1. Sainz’ pit lane limiter wasn’t working, it’s not really his fault.

      1. @rigi I didn’t know that, thanks for the info. I thought at the time that he had to be more careful about pits, as it was not the first time.

  4. Voted for Jenson Button. Made that McTractor look pretty good and beat Alonso with the upgraded (failing) engine. Probably the first time all season both McLaren’s have actually looked racy on pure pace.

    Kvyat (until he crashed), Ricciardo, Perez, Vettel and Hamilton were all pretty excellent too.

    1. Same opinion here.

    2. Button for me too. Vettel has earned it as well, but he is just spotless this season, I am tired of voting for him.

      Given the state of McLaren, plus that Button had the last spec engine, it was a really solid drive from him.

      1. Vettel has earned it as well, but he is just spotless this season, I am tired of voting for him.

        LOL. I feel really sorry for Vettel. He gets passed over even after getting acknowledged as pretty much perfect.

    3. Definetly Jenson; i just think people did not think of his race before they voted.

      1. +1, i voted Jenson. Some good overtaking and a fastest lap at one stage in the race.

    4. I voted VES, but when I read your post, I wish I had thought some more. BUT deserves it – he really out drove ALO and made the best of his machinery, and his opportunities.

    5. Why on earth would Button beating Alonso and his broken down engine be a sign of good performance?

      Alonso was heading for a great race result when the engine failed.

  5. Yeah I’m not even going to over think this. Not voting for the race winning, world championship winning driver, who won in mixed conditions, in a five way fight for the lead, in a car you can’t categorically state was the fastest car is madness. Lewis Hamilton.

    1. Except you can categorically state it was the fastest.

      1. I agree, but probably except the part at the beginning with Inters. Red Bull was faster. Though I admit we didn’t see Nico’s pace in clean air.

    2. Is it really madness not voting for Lewis?

      Well, Merc was the fastest car as soon as the track started to dry…
      Beaten by Rosberg in Qualy, driver error on turn one that led to contact, slower pace than Rosberg until the track dried, and all the luck in the world with the last safety car.
      He won because of Nico making driver error and a late SC that erased those 10s advantage Nico gained over him.

      1. That Ferrari chased them down at a frightening rate and the Red Bulls took them self out of the race through incident. I’m still not convinced the Mercedes was the quickest car this weekend in either condition.

        Q3 was called off, was bold enough even with the high stakes to go for it, and true.

        Like I said I’m not overthinking this one, there were a number of drivers who had an exceptional race and I’m sure you can quantifiably rate their performance higher. But they weren’t fighting for a championship and they didn’t win the race.

        1. Red Bull did wet setup. That’s why they looked fast in wet and a lot slower in dry. Mercedes was clearly overall fastest. At least when Vettel wasn’t somehow chasing them down the road like a bat out of hell …

        2. @philipgb
          If Lewis was not so slow in the first part of the race, did not get outqualified by his teammate, and did not luck into the win thanks to two safety cars, I might have gave it to him.

      2. Got to remember all the bad luck in the world with the VSC before that – if you’re going to take into account one, you should do the same with the other.

        1. You make your own luck. He was second.

    3. I gave Hamilton my vote as well. I’ve never really been much of a fan and everyone did a stellar job to give us a great race, but the man who fought hard for the win and took his third championship is the DOTW in my opinion.

  6. My driver of the weekend was Max Verstappen, but i think he’ll get the most votes anyway, so my vote goes to a driver that has impressed me ever since he made his debut.

    Alexander Rossi.

    He out-qualified Stevens and even though he didn’t really have a chance to finish ahead of anyone, he held Nasr behind him for a long time. And we have to keep in mind, all the other drivers now have a lot of experience in this years cars, he’s only had his thrid race in that car. It just shows that, even if he couldn’t take the fight to Vandoorne in GP2 this year, he deserves a full time drive for Manor next year.

    1. Rossi was on fire, and with a bit more luck, he could really have been in the points!

  7. Tough one this time. It’s between Verstappen, Button and Vettel. Vettel’s recovery drive was exceptional and his strategy was spot on. Button was classic Button in damp conditions. However Verstappen for slapping it well into the top 10 in qualifying and having a mega final stint seals the deal for me. Sainz had a strong recovery drive after his qualifying error though.

    1. Verstappen didn’t qualify well into the top 10. He was 10th. He just started 8th because of Vettel and Raikkonen getting engine penalties.

  8. Saw the race on a very disjointed way with interruptions due to visiting family and even a car trip across town during the race, but I give the nod to LH, as much as I disliked him moving NR off the track, for taking the win and stamping his authority on the WDC, even though I acknowledge Max’s race and his continuous exciting season and what his future should hold, as well as SV’s day. But it’s driver of the weekend and LH didn’t get a chance to answer to NR’s q2 decided pole.

  9. Has to be between the too VE’s for me, either Vettel or Verstappen. Both immense. Going for Verstappen because he largely got to the front on is own steam, overtaking and not winning places because of DNFs and mistakes. Showed great awareness in the rain. Incidentally his team mate was ridiculously impressive too, but his mistake in qualifying and the fact the majority of his places was won at the start and afterwards from DNFs and mistakes makes it slightly less glossy, but this from Sainz was as good as Verstappen was in Hungary and Suzuka and rightly got credit for, so Sainz, kudos too.
    Shout-out to Button for once again managing conditions perfectly in the wet-drying.

  10. Surely, the DOTW has to be Max Verstappen. This is probably a bold statement, but I think that he is doing a better job in the Toro Rosso than Vettel did in 2007/8. Yes, Vettel won a race but in 2008 I would say that it was probably easier for a midfield team to win then than it is now. There was no super-fast dominant car in 2008, and Massa, Hamilton and Raikkonen were not very good that weekend in Monza.

    1. He’s currently on more points than Torro Rosso have ever scored in a season. Not a Torro Rosso Driver, but both drivers in the team combined.

      Granted before 2010 they were on the old points system, but still remarkable.

      However under the current point scoring system Vettel would have been on 93 points in 2008. I do think it’s easy to underestimate what Vettel did that year , he outscored Webber in the actual Red Bull and by more than the 10 points that win gave him. Then you look where Coulthard and Bourdais finished that season and it truly gives some perspective on what Vettel delivered. His promotion wasn’t just because of a one off win.

      1. If the car didn’t came out late that year, Vettel could have beaten Alonso with the way he was driving that year.

        1. Back then STR used pretty much the same car as Red Bull did. But then with a Ferrari engine instead of a Renault engine.

          1. And Red Bull were down in 7th in the team’s championship, with a worse car than they have now.

    2. Not really. They were just as much off the front. There were a couple of wins from front of the midfield but those were all weird situations really. And Vettel scored so much that he got the 6th for the team that year. They could have finished 5th if they had a better 2nd driver too. But at the beginning of the season they were nowhere, driving last year’s car, more like Force India this year I guess. No, they were actually a lot worse. But later on Vettel capitalized on that wet race immensely. Verstappen did good, but he qualified 10th. He needs to work on his quali, he was slower than Massa of Williams…. Like his teammate he was also depending on others getting DNF or getting into incidents this race. And that’s pretty normal. Vettel had that 1 win, but he also had a lot of races like Verstappen had too, finishing 4-5-6 regularly. Not like he had more DNFs than SV did back then, but he does have half the points that guy did.

  11. Vettel, Max, Button… In that order, honorable mentions to others… Many raced well.

    1. ColdFly F1 (@)
      26th October 2015, 19:16

      Agree with those 3 @jureo. All memorable drives.
      I include Sainz in that list; he also drove extremely well.
      And Kvyat almost made my list; until he crashed.

      As much as I like Vettel this year, and would vote for him as DOTY, I cannot vote for him this weekend. He drove very well, but it was a bit embarrassing to be overtaken by Max, even if it was only for a very stint.

      This week I’ll vote for Button.

      1. Button who got out-qualified by his teammate is more vote-able than Vettel who got overtaken by Verstappen for a couple of hundred meters when he had practically nowhere to go…

        You do realize Toro Rosso might have been even faster than Ferrari at that part of the race… They have a chassis right up there with the very best. I was surprised they qualified so badly. Max was slower than Williams at qualifying and he was barely matching Alonso on damp track with slicks. What was that… It looks like McLaren might have a good chassis then, even if it’s not at RB/STR/Merc level yet.

        1. ColdFly F1 (@)
          27th October 2015, 7:25

          You probably missed that only Alonso’s McLaren had the PU upgrade.

          1. You probably missed that the upgrade was like 1 tenth of a second, and the quali was in wet.

    2. I think you right here with Lewis and Sainz as 4th and 5th. It was really hard to select as these five drivers are really the best.
      Button did well outracing Alonso with his power engine
      Max did a good quali and even beter race
      Vettel was really good but at the end i thought you would pass ROS with his new tyres…
      Sainz was good but boged his quali and damaged his car and again hit Alsonso i think a tad risky.
      Lewis did what he should do with that car winning. But i wasn’t impressed in the wet when the red bulls took over.

      1. Alonso had an accident.
        Max had a bad quali.
        Rosberg lost 2 seconds in 3 laps to Vettel all of a sudden, but if he lost the position he might have lost his job. It’s possible he was thinking should he let Vettel get ahead, not that Ferrari was faster or anything.
        Sainz was right behind his teammate, but again they managed a bad pit stop in Toro Rosso with a pit limiter not working too.
        Red Bull had a wet set up.

  12. Has to be between the too VE’s for me, either Vettel or Verstappen. Both immense. Going for Verstappen because he largely got to the front on is own steam, overtaking and not winning places because of DNFs and mistakes. Showed great awareness in the rain. Incidentally his team mate was ridiculously impressive too, but his mistake in qualifying and the fact the majority of his places was won at the start and afterwards from DNFs and mistakes makes it slightly less glossy, but this from Sainz was as good as Verstappen was in Hungary and Suzuka and rightly got credit for, so Sainz, kudos too.
    Shout-out to Button for once again managing conditions perfectly in the wet-drying.

  13. Voted Max. Vettel was a close second.

    I am wondering how the career is going to shape up for Max. I don’t think he will step into Ferrari after Kimi retires next year. Ferrari will keep him as the replacement for Vettel after 2020 or so by which Max might have driven for a big team like Red Bull or ??? …. . By then who knows he would have a WDC to flash at Maranello. They will pocket him just like they did Vettel. The lure of the Ferrari Legacy is too hard for many to ignore.

    And Guess what by 2020 he will be just 23 which is not an old age by any means !!!!!

    1. @tmax Goes to show, that guy could be still driving in F1 by the time we reach 2030! and if he does a MSC and continues until he’s past 40, he’ll be racing until 2040! MAD!

      1. @fer-no65 Wow the Numbers looks Scary by all means…. That is Like Jos Verstappen , Senna (RIP), Mansel or Prost still drivng today !!!!

      2. He’ll probably get bored.

  14. ILuvSoundtracks (@)
    26th October 2015, 18:34

    Verstappen. Maybe he’ll do it much, much better the next races?

  15. Vettel 1st, Verstappen 2nd, Button 3rd. shame that nico did the mistake at the end otherwise he would have been 1st

  16. No love for Ricciardo in the comments above, which surprised me.
    Vettel was impressive, as usual.
    Hamilton was able to roll with the punches and salvage a win when it really didn’t look to be on.
    Verstappen and Button shone, some great moves.
    Maldonado did well, again. Shocking but good.
    I enjoyed the coverage of Hulkenberg, Sainz and Perez too.
    But a complete package, over the whole weekend (what there was of it)? Probably Vettel, but it’s marginal.

  17. Has to be Verstappen, stellar drive once again!

  18. Vettel, of course. He is the better driver of this generation. Also good work by Sainz, Verstaapen, Nasr, Perez and Hamilton.

  19. I really don’t understand anyone voting for Hamilton – he was weaker in nearly everything during the race than Rosberg, even after a better start and pushing Rosberg off the track he fell behind his teammate, who was clearly on for a win – but his only mistake came during the final part of the race which decided the winner, so Rosberg falls out of contestion too.

    Verstappen, Button and Vettel were all having a great race, but I chose Ricciardo as he was quicker than Kvyat throughout the day, and when he got ahead of him he pulled off the overtake of the year on Hamilton – only the lack of rain stopped him from a win, but Red Bull’s mistake of not pitting either car during the first SC was also crucial of missing out on at least a podium or top4 chance.

    1. They did a dry setup on purpose. That is how they were soo fast. Reverse of fortunes with no further rain.

      Ricciardo still cannot match his teammate at the starts imo.

      1. And Kvyat can’t match his teammate in keeping the car on the road.

        The start is mostly mechanical anyway. So that says more about the car than the driver.

    2. ColdFly F1 (@)
      27th October 2015, 7:29

      Same here @hunocsi.
      IMO Rosberg was better than Hamilton this weekend, but less than 1/10th of the votes of his teammate.
      Maybe you get bonus points for DOTW when you win the WDC ;-)

    3. Weaker in everything that didn’t matter you mean?

      Hamilton got the win while Rosberg crumbled -> marks for Hamilton and exit on the side for Rosberg.

      If anything, it was obvious he didn’t have the laps to get his setup perfected and yet he still beat Rosberg with it.

      1. @patrickl He was slower, his inters went out faster, plus I think for the first time he got properly overtaken by Rosberg, who made a mistake, that’s why Hamilton won. That’s not a plus for him, that’s a minus for Rosberg. And had Rosberg made that mistake let’s say during the period when he led by 10 seconds, it wouldn’t have mattered anything, but obviously it was at a crucial time, so it’s a big minus – but his driving was much better, he lost it in the head.

        And Hamilton had the chance to drive more in practice, he chose to not go out as much.

        1. Hamilton was told by the team to wait for FP2. Which then was cancelled.

          Whatever happened, Hamilton beat Rosberg. So he performed better than Rosberg. Rosberg didn’t just make an error, he was hounded by Hamilton and pushed into a driver error trying to stay ahead. That’s a skill. Especially these days when it’s so hard to follow a car as close as Hamilton was doing.

          Vettel didn’t have a great weekend because he binned it in Q1. Crashed into the barrier and only barely made it back. I really don’t understand how anyone can vote for him. See how that works?

          1. Whatever happened, Hamilton beat Rosberg.

            Yes, the results tell us that, but this is the Driver of the Weekend vote.

  20. Have to go with Max. Didn’t have any sensible running in FP3, but ran high in Q1 and 2 to end up 8th on the grid. Finished 4th, perhaps with some ‘luck’ from safety cars, but as always, those conditions are the same for everyone. Vettel, Button and Sainz had notable races, but Vettel didn’t really impress in qualifying, Button wasn’t as impressive as Max in my opinion and Sainz’ mistake in Q1 was his own fault, so can’t really credit him with a good race weekend.

    1. Imo Max getting ninth in quali was what’s disappointing and less than impressive for me :( They didn’t have an over-the-top wet setup like the RedBulls maybe, but they could have at least beaten Williams and Massa! At least they didn’t go overboard with wet setup like RedBull and had a good pace in dry part of the race as well. Why would Red Bull do such an illogical thing I don’t know… Not like it would matter if they setup the car like Ferrari and qualified behind, Ferrari was gonna get penalty in any case. I guess they risked it all for a wet win race.

  21. I see Rosberg’s family has been voting again…

  22. If Rosberg had gone on to win the race I think he would have got my vote, after all he got pole, had the pace over Hamilton for the first stint at least and made some good moves to get back into position after the start. But he slipped up under pressure (yet again) so I’m afraid he doesn’t deserve it.

    Lots of drivers made errors so for me it was between verstappen, button and vettel who were mostly clean and finished well but like the majority I went with the youngster in the end.

  23. It was between Perez, Button and Ricciardo. All three of them very quite unlucky with the SC. VES, VET, HAM had benefited hugely from these SCs. I was going to go for Perez due to his great drive in the wet and great finish with all the problems he was reporting on the radio but in the end it had to be Button. Another great drive from him in tricky conditions and I always love to see drivers really shine like this. These conditions were great equalizer and we could clearly see who has the skill but not the cars to do it when it’s dry.

    1. I guess you had difficulties understanding the strategies for some drivers.
      Especially, how did you think Vettel got lucky, and even benefited HUGELY from SCs is beyond me…
      He was always gonna finish 3rd with his pace and start lap and everything he did on track. He could have won the race if he had any luck whatsoever though.

      Perez was 2 sec per lap slower on damp circuit with slicks compared to Hulkenberg. Very good indeed /s

  24. Its got to be Raikkonen.

  25. I chose Max. Him defending RAI was brilliant!

  26. Like @keithcollantine I too had Vettel and Ricciardo on my shortlist. Seb escaped all incidents and together with a brave strategy, though not pursued till the end, recovered excellently. Dan too, but also foudn himself in a much tougher (mentally) poisiton when he was leading the race, and dropped to tenth through no fault of his own (maybe he could’ve left Hulkenberg some more space, not saying it’s his fault but if Rosberg drove like this we’d see Hamilton retire much more often). Verstappen was faultless and probably Button too, though we saw much less of him. In the end Keith persuaded me and I’ve picked Max too!

  27. Peppermint-Lemon (@)
    26th October 2015, 22:21

    Jenson got my vote. Brilliant drive in a pig of a car. But Max is the true heir to Schumacher talent wise.

  28. Verstappen, Vettel, Ricciardo, and Raikkonen all had great drives. The drives from Rosberg and Hamilton were enjoyable too. Yes, there were mistakes, but mistakes happen when drivers are really pushing. However, my pick is Jenson Button. That pig of a McLaren had no business fending off the Torro Rosso or Force India cars, never mind passing them. Outstanding stuff.

    Shame Alonso never got a fair chance to showcase what the upgraded engine can do, but Mexico is only one week away.

    1. How can you say Raikkonen had a good race?

  29. Bernd Maylander.

  30. 1. VES
    2. BUT/ALO
    3. VET
    4. SAI

    Max once again demonstrated his remarkable skills. Very mature and intelligent driving. Great to see how he was giving the Ferraris a hard time!
    Props to Button/Alonso, Vettel and Sainz!
    Great race for Sainz although he’s still a bit rough on the overtaking and managing his car. At the end he was again struggling with his brakes!
    Hopefully this race makes him realize he’s able to do great things on his own without the need to compare himself to Max all the time. His teammate is from another level and he should just accept that. Great things are possible for Sainz too when he’s able to smoothen things up a bit! Hopefully he will get that chance!

    1. What a disrespectful unemphatic comment. You must be seeing Rosberg and Sainz as very similar, along with Massa and others. What sort of behavior is this… Internet makes everyone brave and cruel!

      1. ColdFly F1 (@)
        27th October 2015, 7:46

        (i guess you mean ‘non empathetic’)
        But anyway, I cannot see anything wrong or cruel in @gniuz‘s comment. He is actually quite supportive of Sainz with a lot of praise.
        If only more commenters on Internet could be like that.

    2. There is only one driver today who is worthy of the title DotW and that person should be Max Verstappen.
      This boy has it all it seems. He is mature beyond his years, he has a certain skillset I haven’t seen for many many years and this kid is very intelligent….not to speak about his racecraft
      Max is not only a great overtaker but his defense is pretty impressive aswell. The way he was holding of Kimi and at the same time he took the battle to Vettel….thats something you have to give to Max. He drives a STR with a Renault powered engine…..think about it. This kid is a true racing genius…and I’m pretty excited to think what will happen when you put him next to Vettel or Lewis. All the hype surrounding Max when he made the step from carts to F3 to F1….was not exaggerated. This kid, still 18 years young, will become the next Schumacher or Senna.

      Sainz had a great drive aswell. The last 2 races he is showing what he can do when he is having the right mindset. Just like someone commented before….don’f focus on Max…he is different, but focus on ur own strenghts. His overtaking is not that smooth and he still makes to many mistakes, but then again, he is a rookie like Verstappen, and these guys have to learn. Sainz is not afraid to attack…and he is pretty good in the wet.

      Honorable mentions go to: Vettel, Ricciardo and Button

      1. I think you are getting ahead of yourself a lot.

  31. I think, Verstappen deserves it again.

  32. So if for a random example the person with the fastest car goes from 15th to first in a race, they are not DOTW in any way shape or form. If the person in the second fastest car by only a very small margin goes from 15th to second they are DOTW? I’m confused arent they only achieving the same as the person with the fastest car? Max or Jenson clearly DOTW Seb just done exactly what his car should of done had he done better than what his car could do ie: passed ham or nico then yes but other than that I don’t see it sorry.

  33. Verstappen, stint 3 28 laps on his tyres. Good achievement in general but then also managing to get 4th on these tyres. DOTW material I say..

  34. Button. Fighting for places and finishing P6 in a substandard car.

  35. I usually don’t vote for Lewis Hamilton, but the Triple world champion has earned my vote this time. Salute to him

  36. Verstappen and Vettel both drove nearly perfect races – and in fact Max reminded me of Vettel’s 2008 drives with Toro Rosso. I was rooting for him to get on the podium, but at the same time, I know I’ll be getting bored with him on the podium in a few years – its that obvious.

    But I had to vote for Jenson today. Clearly the McLaren was okay in these conditions but he really seemed to have good pace today – a bit of a sentimental vote but fully deserved.

  37. Vote for Button.

    Superb qualifying, great start, always had the pace on all conditions entire weekend (even setting up fastest lap too!), and still get 6th in that McLaren without the new Honda engine even with 2 SC period (which hurts him a lot more because he need gap to behind more than closing the gap to the front). Still showing why he is the best driver on changing conditions.

  38. Voted for Vettel. No matter which track or where he starts from, there seem to be a podium spot reserved for him.

    1. Could say the same for Hamilton and Rosberg? Having the second fastest (with a big gap to third) and one of the most reliable cars should mean easy podium just like easy wins for mercs? I don’t see the logic of how Lewis and Nico are not good for putting a winning car in first or second but someone else is a god because they put a podium car on the podium? :s

      1. There is a big difference between starting on the front row and going on to be 1st or 2nd, and starting 13th and coming through the field to be 3rd. I certainly wouldn’t call it any easy podium, Vettel also had an outside chance at the win if the last safety car hadn’t happened.

        1. My point being that a clear fastest or second fastest car will easily come through the field when qualified further back didn’t Hamilton recently (more than once) come from the back of the field to the podium? No one said that was anything but the car that done that for him? Let’s not forget the amount of safety cars that neutralise any advantage cars ahead would have hense making it much easier for vettel to close up.

          1. Further more the outside chance of a win only existed in the first place because of VSC and safety cars even happening. So if you count one safety car you must count the other.

  39. VETTEL takes it, could have easily got caught up in the 1st lap malaise, put his head down and pushed when he needed too.

  40. It’s difficult…
    I vote Vettel cause he did a fantastic race starting 13th and finishing 3th very close to Rosberg.
    I also think that Rossi did a fantastic performance too.

  41. My dad who doesn’t usually watch the Grand Prix remarked that Verstappen would be a future World Champion after what I thought was a stand-out performance and one that was very exciting to watch. Therefore my vote goes to Max!

  42. Lewis best driver

  43. How about a “worst driver of the race” as well. My vote would go to Hamilton for his first corner misbehavior on Rosberg and his arrogant comments and sickening hypocrisy afterwards.

    1. Fans are the ones with sickening hypocrisy.

    2. Did Senna, piquet, vettel and Ms not also do aggressive (some far more questionable) things on the way to world championships. Didn’t Martin brundle not once say that Senna would put the car where you move or crash? The levels of bias between past and current champions is unmeasurable nowadays he didn’t even break any rules so what is wrong with it?

  44. It was difficult to choose between Sainz, Max and Lewis but went for Lewis, apart from his forceful move on the first corner he showed yet again his race craft, he did not make any huge mistake and kept his head cool, we can’t say the same for Nico who seems mentally weak although very strong on pace and qualy.

    This season showed how Lewis can’t handle the title with a trouble free journey.

    1. I saw nothing of the fabled race craft from Hamilton.

  45. I’ve just seen the race from the onboard stream, and my vote for Verstappen is totally vindicated. At one point you see his battle with Raikkonen from Kimi’s onboard, and his defending is second to none. A few laps later, you see him overtake Vettel in a brilliant battle (from Kimi’s cam), a damn shame the director missed that. Afterwards Vettel gets the position back. But then just before the pit-stops for slicks, Verstappen overtakes Vettel again. In the twisty, cornery bit. Imagine how good you have to be to overtake Vettel there?! Shame the director missed that, and because the pit-stops were literally seconds later, it didn’t show much on the leaderboard, but check the race again and briefly Verstappen was ahead of Vettel the lap he pitted. Brilliant.

    1. Hey Hahostolze,

      could you tell me where you watched that footage? I would really like to see it myself.

    2. Can you share a link to this footage?

      1. Link is down I’m afraid, FOM got to it.

  46. Voted for Verstappen: fought hard, but kept his cool; managed to make the tyres last sort of, brought his midfield chassis and socalled “uncompetitive” Renault engine back home in a best-of-the-rest position of fourth place. Plaudits to Max, STR and Renault for their USGP result!

    1. How does STR have “midfield chassis”. Man, it’s one of the best, better than Ferrari, Force India, Lotus, McLaren. And it was a wet/damp GP.

      1. yes, beautiful chassis by STR

      2. The chassis is great, not as good a Red Bull any more, but it’s still pretty good. It’s just the engine which gives them such a huge disadvantage relative to the likes of Mercedes and Ferrari. If the Renault engine would be on par with at least the Ferrari engine or a Mercedes customer engine, Toro Rosso would be fighting for 3th spot with Ferrari in some races (given that Red Bull drops the ball sometimes and would have had the same engine).

  47. Max Verstapen seems to be a fan favourite… Geez. Good thing Kimi has 2016 contract.

  48. TIL: F1 fans can ALWAYS find reasons not to give DOTW to Vettel lol.

  49. From all the post race coverage and the news over the last few days I thought Senna won the race and the championship, it’s clear there was one a driver called Lewis Hamilton but he has been possessed by Senna, from all the interviews I keep hearing sound like Senna won his 4th title. I am waiting for Senna’s face to be tattooed on Hamilton’s back. With all his money I hope Lewis does not go the Michael Jackson plastic surgery route and attempt to look just like Senna. I have a feeling by the start of next year he will have adopted a strong foreign accent when speaking in English that is very close to Senna.

  50. Seb, Jens and maybe Max, that’s my take.

  51. I was impressed by Verstappen, I think he drove an outstanding race in where he kept his head cool and managed to challenge the Ferraris for the podium.

  52. Sure Vettel made up 10 grid spots, but keep in mind that he has the 2nd best car on the grid with an upgraded engine. Max, Button, and Sainz were more impressive in my opinion.

  53. Button and Alonso both had a very good race. Sorry to see that Alonso does not get the recognition he deserves for the great week-end he had. He outqualified Button by a second, had a good start and was unfortunate to be spun around by Massa. For all the praise Button gets for driving in changing conditions, his lap times on the intermediates were not really inspiring. Alonso was on average a second faster at this point. Would be nice if the new engine were that much faster, but I don’t think it is. It was great to see both drivers actually fighting for track position and both had good overtakes. In the end Alonso was unlucky again with the engine problems, he would have gotten some points (or at least a point) otherwise. Without all the problems Alonso might well have finished in front of Button, so to say Button outraced him, like some of the comments here, is not really fair.

  54. Went with Vettel, he had the most impressive overall weekend for me.

  55. It is between Vettel and Verstappen, going with Verstappen as he’s in a Toro Rosso and managed almost half a race on options.

  56. I voted for Verstappen but a lot of drivers impressed me. Both McLarens for starters – Alonso could have been fourth, fifth without all the misfortune he had, and Button was also very strong throughout. Ricciardo got a bit of an Alonso-style shafting but drove beautifully, and Vettel also deserves a mention.

    As for the guys in first and second… Hamilton and Rosberg did well but there were fairly substantial downsides to both their weekend performances, so didn’t even think about voting for either of them.

  57. Such arguments!

    For the most part, every driver was fantastic this weekend.

    It’s very difficult to pick a one that stands out, given the complexities of considering the context of their own, individual races.

  58. Why there is much criticizm for Hamilton .
    It wasnt a dominant weekend for him but still he made p1.At the first stint Redbulls on a wet weather setup was faster than the merc but he still managed to hold them for many laps.He was gaining on Rosberg before he did that error.He should have easily passed Rosberg on track.later stages Rosberg even struggled to keep vettel’s Ferrari then how he should keep Hamilton ‘s faster merc.Hamilton has mixed fortunes in race by vsc and sc periods.But I voted for verstappen.Vettel a close second.Good drives from Hamilton,Button,perez and sainz.

  59. I thought there were a few contenders for driver of the weekend.

    Rosberg had the edge on Hamilton in wet qualifying to take pole, and he managed to overtake his teammate during the race for the first time in quite a while, although Hamilton’s tyres were gone at that point.

    But Rosberg’s mistake under pressure late in the race to let Hamilton through took him out of the running for driver of the weekend for me.

    While I may understand why Rosberg is upset after losing the lead at the start I thought Hamilton’s move was firm but fair. I don’t know why Rosberg still thinks he can overtake round the outside on a corner like that, given recent history you would have thought he wouldn’t even have attempted it and would have gone for the cut back to be in a better position to overtake later in the lap.

    Vettel had a great recovery drive after his engine penalty to earn a podium and at one stage it looked as if he may even challenge Rosberg for second.

    Verstappen was again impressive reaching Q3 and finishing a very good fourth in the Toro Rosso.

    Button put in another good drive in changeable conditions which has become a bit of a trade mark for him.

    Ricciardo was very close to the Mercedes in wet qualifying, and while the track was wet early in the Grand Prix led the race, had it not dried out he could have taken the victory, but Red Bull didn’t have the pace in the dry, that and car damage contributed to him dropping down the field as the race went on.

    In the end my vote went to Verstappen, with runners up Vettel, Ricciardo and Button.

  60. Gave it to Sainz. Was involved in one battle or the other for the whole race and then made the move stick on Button to come 6th (barring the penalty for something not in his control).

    Although the race was exciting in parts, really found it difficult to name a driver who was excellent all around.

    Ricciardo, Kvyat were impressive in the wet, Rosberg almost made it if he got the win, Vettel although had a podium, didn’t really need to work for it unlike his other races. Hamilton got the win by default after Rosberg’s mistake. Max was fighting battles during the early part of the race but post settling in 4th, there wasn’t much from him, not his fault though.
    Props to Rossi as well for finishing 12th. Memorable outing for him to have finished his home GP and being so close to the points. If only Maldonado had been his usual self, Manor would have got a point there :)

    So Sainz seems apt for me for being in the boil all race long and getting some points. Didn’t watch Qualifying to really take that into consideration as well.

    Finally, Alonso should really get off his high horse. His teammate beat him fair and square. With only 12 cars running, I don’t see any reason why would he even think of coming in and retiring. Incidents aplenty in the race and any more would have certainly had him in points. High time someone at McLaren brings him in line.

  61. Has to be Verstappen. Amazing how he managed to keep up with the big boys during the whole race.

    De Merc boys were on top because of their car. So was Vettel with the second fastest car behind the guys in the fastest car. Just about crashing out in Q1 wasn’t impressive either.

    Verstappen punched well above the performance of his car. With even some nice overtakes on his Red Bull mates.

    Second place for Hamilton though. Of course he has the fastest car, but he was in a constant fight with everybody it seemed. The setup obviously wasn’t perfect because he had so few laps in practise. Even with some problems he just kept his head down and kept pressure on the guys ahead. Again pressuring Rosberg into a fail.

  62. A few moments before the end of the race I said: Rosberg had this race entirely under control, despite the situation at the start. And just a few seconds later he proved me wrong and ruined his brilliant race with one of the most embarrassing and costly mistakes of his career.

    So who is left? Actually only Verstappen and Vettel. The reason I voted for Verstappen is his lack of experience compared to Vettel. Still, he delivered an extra-class performance in these utterly difficult conditions and made no mistake at all. He’s a future world champion.

    Of course, I don’t want to take away anything from Vettel, but it’s more like we’re getting used to these kind of performances from him this season. In 2015, he’s absolutely brilliant.

  63. Max Verstappen Without a doubt!Put this talent in a Mercedes and he will give Hamilton a run for his money!

  64. Max Verstappen all the way. The guy actually made lunges before the straight and then defensed with the lack of engine power. That’s a standout memory for me as I didn’t see any driver even attempt anything like that.

    Special shout out to Carlos Sainz Jr. and Sergio Perez.

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