Yup, still should just ignore it rather than the reaction he gave.
Yup, still should just ignore it rather than the reaction he gave.
If the car is absolutely dominant, one would expect consistent one-two finishes (barring external circumstances) and/or drivers cruising to the horizon with double-digit second leads. We have not seen that consistently over this season, so my conclusion is that the car is not dominant (as of yet - that may change of course).Shal_Leg16 wrote: ↑07 Sep 2022, 09:18Dont get how Max and RB fans still deny that they have the best most Dominant package.
May be the dominance is not like of the mercs level sply on car/engin front but overall combination , Car+driver+wingman+diver priority+sharpness in strategy+ sharpness in pits+ adaption to different situations + regular updates on car etc . if we add all that the combination is head & Shoulders above the rest.
Those wins from 10th, 15th looked like a cakewalk
I think that's a totally reasonable point of view.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑08 Sep 2022, 10:54But as was said during the Mercedes days, if you put any of the top echelon of drivers in the RB18, they'd be where Max is now, just as Max in the Mercs would be where Hamilton is now in terms of records if he'd had the Mercs.
Which would be a solid argument if that level of performance had been representative for the rest of the season. But it hasn’t. Back in the days (2014-2016, 2020) legitimately 9/10 races were like that. With one team just cruising at the front. From all those seasons you could name the races there was legitimate competition (on pace) on one hand. Malaysia 2015, Hungary 2015, Singapore 2015, Monaco 2016, AD 2020. The rest of the races won by someone not named Merc were fluke wins.Quantum wrote: ↑08 Sep 2022, 11:21I think that's a totally reasonable point of view.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑08 Sep 2022, 10:54But as was said during the Mercedes days, if you put any of the top echelon of drivers in the RB18, they'd be where Max is now, just as Max in the Mercs would be where Hamilton is now in terms of records if he'd had the Mercs.
Failing a driver physically getting out of a car and pushing it while it's doing 200mph or 3G plus cornering, the car can only ever be driven to 100% potential.
As in Spa, the RB18 started 14th, won the race and beat a Ferrari that started on pole, by 30 seconds with Max not even breaking a sweat. That's literally a perfect example of when a machine is beyond anything else on the grid.
Again, congrats to Red Bull and to Max on his 2nd title.
With engines roughly equal (afawk) amid an aero and chassis formula more restrictive than ever, you have to wonder how much differentiation is ultimately available. RB did their usual good job with chassis/aero, however, once teams start copying each other we'll be at roughly similar aero along with roughly similar engines within a season or two, with suspensions that can't do much beyond the basics. So what will be left for RB to continue perfecting? On the car side.jz11 wrote: ↑07 Sep 2022, 15:20People seem to be misusing the word - dominant, just like "amazed", "mind blown" about the simplest things
RB18 is not a dominant car, if it is, how then would you describe the RBs of the V8 era? or Mercs that lapped the rest of the field? Those were dominant cars, and RB18 isn't, it is better than the rest, sometimes more so, but it ain't dominant
or next time you'll have to call marginally better something to be ultra uber X
this is going OT... and just pure speculation from my sidevorticism wrote: ↑08 Sep 2022, 14:20With engines roughly equal (afawk) amid an aero and chassis formula more restrictive than ever, you have to wonder how much differentiation is ultimately available. RB did their usual good job with chassis/aero, however, once teams start copying each other we'll be at roughly similar aero along with roughly similar engines within a season or two, with suspensions that can't do much beyond the basics. So what will be left for RB to continue perfecting? On the car side.jz11 wrote: ↑07 Sep 2022, 15:20People seem to be misusing the word - dominant, just like "amazed", "mind blown" about the simplest things
RB18 is not a dominant car, if it is, how then would you describe the RBs of the V8 era? or Mercs that lapped the rest of the field? Those were dominant cars, and RB18 isn't, it is better than the rest, sometimes more so, but it ain't dominant
or next time you'll have to call marginally better something to be ultra uber X
So we-lap-any-car-at-some-tracks-as-yet-undefined-range is the definition of dominance?jz11 wrote: ↑07 Sep 2022, 15:20People seem to be misusing the word - dominant, just like "amazed", "mind blown" about the simplest things
RB18 is not a dominant car, if it is, how then would you describe the RBs of the V8 era? or Mercs that lapped the rest of the field? Those were dominant cars, and RB18 isn't, it is better than the rest, sometimes more so, but it ain't dominant
or next time you'll have to call marginally better something to be ultra uber X
It is the whole team, together with Honda, that managed to achieve this result, they simply haven't made mistakes (apart from couple issues at the beginning of the year with the fuel pumps), Max did that one spin, which he recovered from, I can't recall any other mistakes from him.
and I've said a number of times, Merc strategists aren't great, they might not even be good, it was the car and drivers that masked majority of their bad calls, now they don't have that car advantage and their mediocrity is very obvious, compare that to RB years when they were 3rd or 2nd best car, how many obvious strategy mistakes you can recall? Drivers were banging heads once in a while, but strategy calls (even when they turned out not to bear fruit) were justified - mind you, they _always_ were 1 driver oriented, so "mistakes" with the 2nd driver strategy are irrelevant
in short - the _car_ didn't win those 70%, the whole team did, and not without help from Ferrari and Mercedes