Yes, he finished with the fastest lap (125 range), but he finished 11th, so no points.
Indeed, Liam Lawson is not doing himself any harm in putting his name in strong contention for next years AT seat. Australia are producing some racing talent right now, he will be racing in Singapore too.BMMR61 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2023, 14:19I think many fans totally underestimate how great the leap to the F1 level that all rookies face. Lewis had the benefit of a large amount of seat time prior to his brilliant debut and testing back then was multiples greater than what is allowed today. Of course simulator work has enabled the Lando, George, Alex generation to get a sort of feel without getting much seat time. This 2019 F1 intake made sufficient impact to secure their futures while nobody else since has really looked born to be an F1 winner. Until Oscar. There’s been no buzz around Latifi, Mick, Zhou, Sargeant, even Tsunoda. After just a handful of races in a poor MCL60 Oscar looked rather accomplished and to be driving within his ability, after ten races he was clearly a very decent talent. Lawson, similarly, after two races, looks calm and composed but his body of F1 work is still too short to be sure of his speed.
I'm guessing that's just left in to upset some peoplemwillems wrote: ↑04 Sep 2023, 20:03Indeed, Liam Lawson is not doing himself any harm in putting his name in strong contention for next years AT seat. Australia are producing some racing talent right now, he will be racing in Singapore too.BMMR61 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2023, 14:19I think many fans totally underestimate how great the leap to the F1 level that all rookies face. Lewis had the benefit of a large amount of seat time prior to his brilliant debut and testing back then was multiples greater than what is allowed today. Of course simulator work has enabled the Lando, George, Alex generation to get a sort of feel without getting much seat time. This 2019 F1 intake made sufficient impact to secure their futures while nobody else since has really looked born to be an F1 winner. Until Oscar. There’s been no buzz around Latifi, Mick, Zhou, Sargeant, even Tsunoda. After just a handful of races in a poor MCL60 Oscar looked rather accomplished and to be driving within his ability, after ten races he was clearly a very decent talent. Lawson, similarly, after two races, looks calm and composed but his body of F1 work is still too short to be sure of his speed.
No lol It was said without any thought to any of the DR fans and oddly I do know exactly who you mean, it is just a fact. The seat will be up for grabs nextyear, Horner made it clear that at this point it is a temporary move for DR. As good as DR is, he isn't the future, so a young driver outdoing the established driver is a very bold statement and had Liam not done well the DRs chances were boosted. As it is, this will have damaged his chances a little.Ben1980 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2023, 21:03I'm guessing that's just left in to upset some peoplemwillems wrote: ↑04 Sep 2023, 20:03Indeed, Liam Lawson is not doing himself any harm in putting his name in strong contention for next years AT seat. Australia are producing some racing talent right now, he will be racing in Singapore too.BMMR61 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2023, 14:19I think many fans totally underestimate how great the leap to the F1 level that all rookies face. Lewis had the benefit of a large amount of seat time prior to his brilliant debut and testing back then was multiples greater than what is allowed today. Of course simulator work has enabled the Lando, George, Alex generation to get a sort of feel without getting much seat time. This 2019 F1 intake made sufficient impact to secure their futures while nobody else since has really looked born to be an F1 winner. Until Oscar. There’s been no buzz around Latifi, Mick, Zhou, Sargeant, even Tsunoda. After just a handful of races in a poor MCL60 Oscar looked rather accomplished and to be driving within his ability, after ten races he was clearly a very decent talent. Lawson, similarly, after two races, looks calm and composed but his body of F1 work is still too short to be sure of his speed.
In that case I have no idea who that would supposed to annoy!
No guilt here!, its all the same to me , just another fake Englishman As for trying to get digs in, I'm direct where people choose to be direct with me as you may have noticed , otherwise I haven't a clue what digs or digging anyone is on about
One thing people don't take into account though is that, even if Hamilton had a lot of testing, f2 cars were a lot different to f1 cars back then, while after the 2022 regulations, f1 cars are very similar in handling to f2. That's why Zhou for example was much more comfortable in his debut season than say Tsunoda.BMMR61 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2023, 14:19I think many fans totally underestimate how great the leap to the F1 level that all rookies face. Lewis had the benefit of a large amount of seat time prior to his brilliant debut and testing back then was multiples greater than what is allowed today. Of course simulator work has enabled the Lando, George, Alex generation to get a sort of feel without getting much seat time. This 2019 F1 intake made sufficient impact to secure their futures while nobody else since has really looked born to be an F1 winner. Until Oscar. There’s been no buzz around Latifi, Mick, Zhou, Sargeant, even Tsunoda. After just a handful of races in a poor MCL60 Oscar looked rather accomplished and to be driving within his ability, after ten races he was clearly a very decent talent. Lawson, similarly, after two races, looks calm and composed but his body of F1 work is still too short to be sure of his speed.
Dafnalina wrote: ↑05 Sep 2023, 05:30Yeah my feelings exactly. Lando is a great lad, has grown from a quite immature kid to a very solid top five driver who really deserves to have had his first win - were it not for this damn era of two team domination! LOL
Please Lando, do it to silence the inner doubts that Oscar's presence in the team will be starting to ignite.