1.
Ferrari - I think singling out Vettel's mistake is too little. Leclerc's fluke of a second place (third on track) only came from being on the right strategy and SC periods. And while it seems that Vettel has really phoned it in, there is so much more to say. We had low expectations for Ferrari, but not having a car missing out on Q2 and being the 5th best team today.
![Facepalm :facepalm:](./images/smilies/icon_facepalm.png)
They were awful, awful. And just see the delta's between last year and this year for their car (and other Ferrari powered cars), and you'll come across the major point of what is wrong. They have the worst PU in the grid right now. How can that happen? Well, guess Binotto and the FIA know the reason, but we won't know.
2.
Haas - How the hell can you go further from this? Honestly, I would have singled out Grosjean's terrible performance, but having (another) two brake failures on the same race and overall, it seems that the team hasn't really fixed their problems from last year, it was another awful weekend for the team.
Honorable mention for the awful
stewarding and for the
NBC broadcast of the Indycar race. The first because, if the incosistencies from yesterday to today regarding Lewis penalty, then they still take a good 20 minutes to detect Pérez broke the pitlane speed limit (at least) and that across the support races, the consistency of their decisions was awful. And for the second? The worst broadcast of motorsport I've ever seen.
Oh yeah, and to
Lewis Hamilton for the overall shenanigans he pulled across the weekend on track. Thankfully, his off track behaviour has been exemplar.