Same car, same strategy, opposite results — one driver gambled on the weather window and the other played it safe.
Pierre Gasly started P13 and finished P8. Lance Stroll started P7 and finished P9. Same team. Same strategy. Same car. The difference was how they drove the seven laps before the red flag.
The rain started on Lap 1 and stopped before the Safety Car on Lap 6. Everyone pitted for softs during the red flag on Lap 7. The race was decided in those six chaotic laps — not by tyre choice, but by who stayed on the throttle when the track was at its worst.
Gasly averaged 79.74 seconds per lap on mediums in the wet. Stroll averaged 79.34. That's four tenths slower per lap — over six laps, that's half a second lost while everyone else was making the same survival calculations. Gasly was gaining positions. Stroll was losing them.
After the restart, the gap stabilised. Gasly held a four-and-a-half-second advantage to the flag, but he didn't build it in the dry — he built it in the wet. The soft-tyre stint tells you nothing about racecraft. Both drivers ran near-identical pace on softs: Gasly averaged 73.89 seconds, Stroll 74.08. Gasly's tyres stayed flat across 17 laps. Stroll's degraded at one hundredth per lap. Irrelevant.
What mattered was Lap 3, Lap 4, Lap 5 — the laps where Stroll should have been using track position to protect seventh and instead found himself ninth by the time the flag came out.
The on-track gap tells the story in one brutal arc. Stroll was 3.5 seconds up at the start. By the red flag, Gasly had reversed it and was ahead by the same margin. That's a seven-second swing in six laps — in conditions where both drivers had the same information, the same car, and the same team.
Gasly found grip where Stroll played cautious. You can see it in the degradation numbers during that opening stint: both drivers' lap times were climbing at five seconds per lap as the rain intensified, but Gasly was positioning, overtaking, making moves. Stroll was surviving.
The speed trace from Lap 13 — deep into the dry stint — shows two cars running in lockstep. No meaningful delta through Senna S, no advantage through the final sector. The Aston Martin was competitive. Stroll just didn't use it when it mattered.
Las Vegas is dry, predictable, and unforgiving to drivers who hesitate on strategy calls. Gasly just proved he doesn't. Stroll proved he does. Same car, opposite instincts — and five net positions between them to show for it.