I thought the high downforce was going to protect the tires.harty71 wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 16:50He appears to have lost some of his tyre management skills, just look at the first stint.Spoutnik wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 16:48He has not lost his race pace which is his strong point since 2017.harty71 wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 16:46
No bias, just calling it like it is.
He fried his tyres for one reason or another which is very unusual and disappointing from him.
His pace and consistency on the hards showed that he finally got his act together.
That's his season down to a tee, messy and inconsistent with times of promise.
He even beat Russell on qualy (despite the fugazi of Hungary etc)
He mad much stronger pace than the Ferrari's, passed Sainz after letting him back through and within a lap his tyres were toast, that much so he was eaten up by Russell and fell a further 3 seconds behind.
That is pretty laughable statement I'm sorrygrubschumi13 wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 16:54Max is really peerless. Perez proves RBR is a good car, Max makes it dominant. I agree with you all, that Max in any of the top 3 cars this year would still win the 2022 title.
I agree with you all...grubschumi13 wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 16:54Max is really peerless. Perez proves RBR is a good car, Max makes it dominant. I agree with you all, that Max in any of the top 3 cars this year would still win the 2022 title.
Duchessa says that the Ferrari worked again because they were able to lower the car on the smooth Yas Marina tarmac. Note that in Mexico and Brazil, their PU struggled.
When I think back to the times of Mansell, Hill, Mika and MS, I know I was a very young, but I can' recall teams/drivers having difficulty switching tyres on or off.
Without doubt it did. Ferrari's non performance related issues aside, Verstappen wouldn't have wrapped it up in Japan otherwise and Charles would have finished well clear of Perez in the rankings.Spacepace wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 17:09Hmm good point. That technical directive to stop flexi planks ended the championship battle
Ferrari were bringing a few big updates instead of constantly updating like Red Bull. I'm sure once they fell back they cancelled further updates so I think they had more in that car but those costs would make more sense to be allocated for '23AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 17:11Without doubt it did. Ferrari's non performance related issues aside, Verstappen wouldn't have wrapped it up in Japan otherwise and Charles would have finished well clear of Perez in the rankings.
No doubt Max is very good but rest of the part is just too much.grubschumi13 wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 16:54Max is really peerless. Perez proves RBR is a good car, Max makes it dominant. I agree with you all, that Max in any of the top 3 cars this year would still win the 2022 title.