Andres125sx wrote: ↑29 Nov 2023, 18:56
At the spanish TV we enjoy Pedro de la Rosa and Toni Cuquerella as commentators, and it´s quite funny because they´re good friends, but also an enginer vs driver, wich is frequently a difficult relationship, so they´re constantly joking about engineers incorrectly assuming drivers are robots who can do whatever engineers ask for (Pedro), or drivers incorrectly assuming they know better than engineers who can analyse live telemetry (Toni). They make a fun, interesting and technical broadcast
De la Rosa once said race engineers should be more of a phsychologist than engineers, as they can´t take any relevant decision, but must be extremelly careful with the way they say things to drivers.
Drivers are extremelly stressed while racing, so they need a polite race engineer who knows the driver, and know how to comunicate with him to avoid absurd distractions or confusing info. Some drivers need as much info as possible, like Alonso, while others needs just the key info like Kimi. It´s the race engineer responsibility to understand what info the driver needs to know, so basically
if the driver is happy with his race engineer, the race engineer is doing a good job, even if we fans think otherwise
I disagree with a couple of these statements. First, they don't need a "polite" engineer; They need an engineer who is leading his team or engineers and strategists, and giving the drivers the "right" information at the "right time". I don't care how smart a driver is, they only have access to a fraction of the data that the engineering team has; How big the gaps and deltas are, what the lap times of all other drivers are, how the different tire compounds are behaving on other cars, on your teammates car, when the best lap to pit is so you are out in the best window... All these things. The driver knows his car, and his race. His engineer
should know everything else about the race better than the driver.
As fans we love it when a driver makes the decision to box on X lap for X tire compound, or to back up and give DRS to the guy behind you to keep the guys behind so you can keep your position, or to let a driver pass you to make up a 5 second penalty. But in reality, the pit wall and engineer SHOULD know this better than the driver. This is what concerns me not only about Charles' engineer, but Carlos' also.
And secondly, I don't care how much the driver likes the engineer, if the engineer is not bringing the best results, or holding a driver back... he's not doing a good job. That kind of thinking is exactly what failed Binotto.