Oh, what a difference 24 hours make! Just yesterday I thought that qualifying for the Chinese GP was boring - then came the race, and suddenly qualifying feels like a nail-biting roller-coaster by comparison. Maybe Sohan was right after all :)
The race did not start badly - in the first corner Bourdais collided with Trulli while attempting an over-ambitious move on the Italian, which allowed Kubica to overtake them both. Having overtaking Piquet off the line, this meant that by the end of lap 1 he had already gained 3 places. Not even 2 laps later Alonso managed a really elegant pass on Heikki, but unfortunately that was to remain the only memorable pass in the whole race...
What made this race so boring to watch was that once the
status quo was established after two laps nothing really changed for the remaining 54 laps Lewis was constantly a little bit quicker than both Ferraris, which in turn were constantly quicker than Alonso, who had the measure of Heikki. He was duly followed by Bushman Nick, who... snore... zzzz.
I woke up for a split second when Heikki got a puncture later in the race, but that was hardly exciting - I find it hard to believe anyone was the least bit moved by that after yet another apathetic performance from the Finn. Kubica, Glock and Piquet did well to overtake Vettel on heavy fuel strategies, but that had more to do with the young German's unspectacular performance (Vettel's, not Glock's - the latter is actually 25 years old already), rather than the other three drivers' blistering pace.
There will of course be some people crying that Ferrari exercised team orders to get Massa in front of Kimi, just as they had done so memorably in Austria 2002. To that I say "yeah, so what?". I have no doubt in my mind that had McMerc been in this situation they would have done the same thing to keep their driver in the hunt for the championship. Plus Austria 2002 was unnecessary as it happened early in a season that Schumi was already dominating - here Ferrari had every right to expect Kimi to yield to Massa, as this would be the Finn's greatest contribution to the team in the second half of the season. To me, whether Ferrari even told him to move over is academic.
Oh, a closing word on Fisichella, who got in the way of every top driver trying to lap him. I am not a fan of doling out penalties like there is no tomorrow, but to me the Italian was really asking for it and I am disappointed to find the stewards did not oblige.