continuum16 wrote: ↑24 May 2023, 18:28
I would agree 100% with the above statement.
The main thing is the expectation put on the team not only by fans but also themselves. If “anything other than first is a failure” then finishing third must, therefore, be seen as a failure. When a team (or indeed anyone even in daily life) fails to meet its expectations, they can either say “we should have been better” or “we could have been worse.”
IMO comments like the 2023 Bahrain GP was “our most painful day as a team” serve no purpose, because clearly that can’t be true, and only serve to fuel the spiral of media and possibly even internal negativity. I mean, surely that’s not worse tha. Spain 2016, or the day Lauda passed away, or whatever else. It’s so obscene that I find it best to dismiss it because it’s clearly sensationalized.
McLaren has grappled with this expectations problem for a whole decade and continues to do so today. Mercedes has only recently encountered this dilemma for the first time since 2013.
There seems to be an idea that acceptance = complacency in F1. As a result, teams and especially fans more often than not tend to avoid accepting their failures for fear they will be seen as giving up, even though that should not be the case.
I’ve followed other racing series for a long time (longer than F1 even) and while my favorite team hasn’t won titles in a very long time, and I’m not expecting them to *this year* I still believe they could do so again. People (not necessarily people here but the general populous) just need to see things on a longer timeline than 1-2 races.
Of course I think everything needs to be contextualised. Anything taken in microcosm can be amplified to push an agenda, the sidepod thing for example. And agree with your post too. It really is just a natural progression that has ebbed and flowed in the sport and in life since the dawn of time.
When you're out of form and get a microphone planted in front of your face, fans and detractors will live or die on every word uttered. It's a shame but I'd hope that a technical forum would be less responsive to the chaff.
Only it seems just as divisive as social media unfortunately. Also wishing your chosen team luck in finding their from again.
Farnborough wrote: ↑24 May 2023, 18:15
My point is that they aren't technically incompetent, stupid or any other of the critique levelled at them.
But they are playing, significantly, a detrimental tune that many will pick up and run with, that is in their control.
They state that they're not there to finish 3rd, that's negative of their own making, when they don't win.
Keep making definitive statement as to performance (recently changed to be more moderate) and non technical leads like "we need to bring out the goodness we know is in the car" gives huge scope for the general consensus to be made up to whatever the Internet feels like. That's the reality of a public facing sport today.
Someone there needs to properly get hold of narrative issued on their behalf and feed realistic view to the many that are genuinely interested.
Again it is pretty specific and tailored only to this team. How can Mercedes be anymore guilty of a detrimental tune than say, Ferrari? In November Binotto said Ferrari would challenge Red Bull in 2023. You reckon the Ferrari team thread gets even 20% of the flack that this would get if Wolf said that?
When quoting a statement of "bringing the goodness out the car", its pertinent to what is being said about set up.
You have to admit that bagging pole position in Oz and running strongly in one race and then not at another must leave the engineers in a quandry. That would mess with any team. As there are a ton of variables, they need to be mastered and a sweet spot needs to be found.
Like I said in the previous post, when viewed through a negative prism, it's really easy to kick a team.
Constructive criticism is cool but cmon man, you have to admit the stuff that gets posted here verges on really unhealthy.