The same social media where someone said that this season Red bull reminds them of Neweys 2007 Mclaren that was fast but fragile!
Yep, Newey's last McLaren was a bit of a dud actually, the 2006 car. As I remember, Pat Fry was the lead on the 2007, which was an extremely reliable car, which Fernando had the longest point scoring streak for McLaren, till Lando broke the record.CjC wrote: ↑08 May 2022, 08:30The same social media where someone said that this season Red bull reminds them of Neweys 2007 Mclaren that was fast but fragile!
Even though the 2007 Mclaren was good enough to win the constructors championship AND Newey left Mclaren early 2006 so how he managed to design the 2007 Mclaren I do not know.
Social media is full of ill informed fools who create a stain on the internet
Yep and to top it off you have all these people calling for his head yet again when he is actually now on Lando's pace and has been since the start of the year and was arguably quicker the last two quallis but dealt a shite hand both times.
Just thinking back to the slow speed on the straights.... praying it really is because they dialled in more downforce and the tyres will subsequently last longer, and not that the car is simply draggy.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑08 May 2022, 17:52A bit concerned about the strategy for the race… Pirelli is calling it a 2 stop race, with Medium - Hard - Hard or Medium - Hard - Medium the fastest strategies… Nevertheless, McLaren only has one of each on hand and used Softs.
Expect the team to run a couple of long stints on the Medium and Hards in order to be able to bolt Softs to the finish line, not ideal if the pace has to be lower to keep the tires alive.
At the same time, the possibility of Safety Cars and even Red Flags is high given not only the nature of the circuit but the fact that there is almost no grip outside of the racing line and those situations can work for you or against you depending on their timing.