organic wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 00:01
Ferrari despite their quick pitstops lost a lot of points in a possible championship fight last year due to these bad stops. Such as a possible fight for win at Miami. They are quick but inconsistent. The only thing worse is slow and inconsistent.
Merc straddle the line between slow and consistent, and slow and inconsistent.
I believe this is why their pitstops have been slow for years: they wish to not make errors with the stops rather than chase every tenth. But it seems this doesn't work in practice. Other teams show you can be just as consistent if not more consistent whilst being quicker.
Yes, it really seems their pit stop philosophy is still based on their many consecutive years having a winning car. In those seasons Merc could easily afford losing a second or two of total race time taking a more cautious approach to the pit stop. Their slower stops rarely ever cost them a track position. Now they aren't always out front, I can't help but feel like they should consider a more aggressive approach. There have been stops in these last 2 seasons where an extra half second has cost one or the other of the Merc drivers track position, and the W13/14 has not always been the best at overtaking, even slower cars.
I wish they gave me the impression their team was more nimble and adaptable, and I feel this shows through in conservative race strategy sometimes, also.
Contrast their pit approach to RB, who are now way out front on race day, still routinely completing their stops in ~2 seconds.