In an era when F1 struggles to entertain, this was a diamond in the rough. I am no longer on the fence about Max...he's the real deal. It was also a win-win-win for the sport. While I still believe Haas is the story of the year, Vettel was right -- the day belonged to Max. How can I deny him the title of "probably the next big thing" when he held off, in my opinion, the two best drivers in the world? Sure, you could say that Max got lucky with the Mercedes incident (actually, the sport got lucky), but to man-handle that cow-of-a-poor-excuse-for-a-racing machine lap after lap in sector three, dancing on a knife edge and not making a mistake under extreme pressure...well...that's the stuff of a potential champion, and worth its weight in 1000 "revamped" qualifying sessions or 20,0000 "competition" cautions. Most of us could not really see just how difficult this was, as Windsor explains below, quite accurately, I would imagine. Vindicated again was the genius of Red Bull. No, Toto, they aren't just an energy drink company. Vindicated further was Ferrari. Hey Nicamilton -- youth is nice, but it's no match for old age and treachery or a team like Ferrari pulling in the same direction, having the "we get it" gene in their DNA. Now, Bernie put your money to good use and crown Mercedes "#1" every year, give them loads of cash, and then let the people really passionate about racing play on.