trinidefender wrote: ↑28 Nov 2023, 20:00
Fakepivot wrote: ↑28 Nov 2023, 15:00
Vanja #66 wrote: ↑28 Nov 2023, 14:41
What's the verdict here on Ferrari splitting with Binotto as TP
Good move? Bad move? Irrelevant? Details and arguments please
If Binotto would not be fired in 2022, he would be now, how can he oversee a car that was worse than f-75 ? it made no big improvements. Tyre wear was still a thing at start. on top that let's not forget how he allowed Sainz camp to dictate how car should favor Sainz.. if Binotto was still there 100% they would have lost Leclerc to other team and forget getting wcc and wdc for another 5 to 10 years..
I quite like Fred, he accepts if they made mistakes, plus Charles has lot of confidence in him, I am excited to see how Fred and Charles partnership will turn out.
Sainz complain many times about the handling of the car. I think you’re quite mistaken if you believe that Ferrari built the car to favour Sainz. Also from your writing it seems that you heavily favour Leclerc. May I suggest you don’t underestimate Sainz so much.
He might not have the complete raw speed as Leclerc in qualifying but on race pace he's there or thereabouts, he also definitely has a smarter racing brain.
Sorry but this narrative is false and i don't understand why it has become a reality in the first place.
Leclerc's advantage over Sainz, from 2021 to 2023, has been higher in race trim than quali trim on average.
Having said that Leclerc had way more issues than Sainz with the SF 23 for two main reasons:
- The car is very limited on the front end. Formu1a.uno reported recently that the SF 23 is one of the car which spend the least amount of time in a corner (it was the case even in Abu Dhabi)
- The car would become extremely unpredictable with an oversteery balance, which is usual what Leclerc goes for
Long story short the SF 23 was pretty much the "Anti Leclerc" definitive car
Now i don't know if they did it on purpose (i doubt it), but yeah it's clearly the car Leclerc hates the most.
The floor introduced in Suzuka allowed Leclerc to use his "usual" balance of choice without making the car unpredictable as before. He said that he helped him a bit in quali, but a lot in the race.
The performance in Abu Dhabi really surprised me. The first stint was absolutely phenomenal both in terms of pace and tyre management. Unfortunately, our performance decreased massively on the hard compound exactly like in Mexico.
There is no way the original SF 23 would have been able to keep up with the RB 19 even in the first stint in a track like Abu Dhabi.