Spoutnik wrote: ↑10 Jul 2023, 13:53
Albon was going at full beans with new Soft tyres in the middle of a DRS train while Leclerc was on medium... so it's not double standart it's just a very different situation. And even with this situation Albon said he couldn't hold up Leclerc for one more lap.
You are basically saying that Russell was unable to overtake Leclerc on track, and I believe it would have been the same story for Lewis despite all you are saying about tyre management being true. So, again, if Ferrari were a competent team, if Perez wasn't a bozo on sunday, Merc would have finished P6-7/8, which is a very different story. How the race unfold made the car looks good, which isn't "good" because the team has to get back to the drawing board imo.
For the medium lap times comparison when did this happen ? When Leclerc was stuck in the midfield and Russell was behind Piastri ?
Check the tweet, the fuel loads are indicative as to when.
You asserted that Ferrari were the quicker car in the race, but we have a fact they couldn't match Mercs pace on the same compound at a near identical fuel load(Russell had marginally more fuel).
You assert the reason was because Ferrari couldn't show their pace because they were stuck behind a Williams.
Yet Merc were on both Ferrari's tails before their 1st Pitstops in a similar situation.
It should also be noted that if Ferrari can't stretch their mediums to at least the pace of a soft after 18 laps, they are in a spot of bother. Because at no time did their drivers get to a crossover point relative to Mercedes or Williams. Yet Mercedes, Red Bull and McLaren could(and Williams).
There's another tell.
So why is Ferrari's inability to overtake the Williams not portrayed as the Williams being the quicker car?
This is essentially what you are doing in the Ferrari/Merc comparison.
Ferrari also have a topspeed advantage to Mercedes in excess of 5kmh according to the quali data and 3kmh faster over start/finish line.
https://f1i.com/news/480241-silverston ... all-5.html
So if Mercedes were stuck behind a faster car in a straightline, they'd wait it out for reasons of tyre preservation, as shown by Russell going 9 laps more than the Ferrari one step compound softer. And they would also maybe get lucky with a safety car, as shown by Hamilton.
Yet Russell still beat both Ferrari's.
They would also hang it out for as long as possible to counter whatever Ferrari do or take the same compound but 6 or 7 laps fresher, this has happened at least 4 or 5 times this season.
All told, the line of least resistance is that Mercedes were just faster, it wasn't a huge difference though.
That relies on less ifs and buts, and it isn't the first time we see Ferrari's inability in the race to switch the tyres on or keep it in optimal windows, which makes their qualy pace largely fanciful.