Bridgestone Malaysia GP summary
The rain which visited the circuit for every afternoon in the build-up to the race remained absent, meaning it was tire strategies using Bridgestone’s two dry tires which defined performance, with a good mix of timing and order of use of the hard and soft compounds.
Hiroshi Yasukawa – Director of Bridgestone Motorsport, says, “Today we saw a very exiting race and I am proud of the part that Bridgestone played in this with a good allocation of tires, as confirmed by the race winner, Sebastian Vettel. Congratulations to Red Bull for their one-two today, and to Mercedes for Nico Rosberg’s third place. It is always a pleasure to visit Malaysia and we have many supporters here. Bridgestone Malaysia celebrated its tenth anniversary around the Grand Prix weekend and they raised over 105,000 Ringgets for their nominated charity – the Global Environment Centre."
Hirohide Hamashima – Bridgestone Director of Motorsport Tire Development, says, “This was a good and interesting race based around tire strategies. The hard and soft Bridgestone compounds performed very well, but with distinct characteristics. Those who started with the soft tire had to stop sooner than those who started with the hard, as the soft had a shorter wear life. The hard allowed drivers to continue pushing, as shown by Mark Webber setting the race’s fastest lap on lap 53 with this tire. The soft required a more forgiving style to maintain its performance. Drivers were able to use fresh tires sets in the race, as they did not use these tires in the wet qualifying yesterday. This meant we saw many fastest race laps as the race progressed, from drivers taking to the track on fresh rubber. Our compounds were able to support a variety of strategies and it was good to see the racing on track between many drivers at different times through the race. Even though the top three drivers used the same strategy, there were strong moves through the field using a hard-soft strategy. So many people predicted rain for this race, but today we did not need wet weather to provide excitement on track."