I agree luck was definitely involved. I'm just saying they probably had some valid reason for their strategy.
Ofcourse and given how much Vettel wanted the win they did the only thing they could to win which was go for a strategy with an extremely low chance of working and hope it did, lucky for them everything possible went in their favour so congrats but still super lucky.
Everything that needed to happen for him to win from a drive which should have landed him in 3rd place on any normal day did happen and so he won the race, if that isn't down to luck i have no idea what red bull did to control the outcome of that race, we should take it to 1 of the local conspiracy theorists and maybe they can find out.
Obviously you watched a different broadcast from me. Because on the BBC feed they clearly kept pointing out that Monaco is all about track position, not the battle over tires like on any other track. I call that good thinking, not luck. Even without the red flag, he may have been able to hold off Alo and Button, especially if they started to duel themselves.
Track position doesn't mean much if you are 2-3 seconds off the pace even at Monaco, every driver has clearly said several times when the tyres drop off that cliff you lose 2-3 seconds per lap maybe more and as i said from all the data every team had the tyres should never have lasted 50+ laps let alone 68, so again they went for a strategy that was extremely unlikely and got lucky how is this so hard to understand?
....... we should take it to 1 of the local conspiracy theorists and maybe they can find out.
It was Alguersuari's Toro Rosso Going into the back of Hamilton that caused the crash that brought out the red flag, Hamilton said before the race to watch out for the Toro Rosso's helping Red Bull.


