I agree. After first pitstop he was lapping 1-2 seconds faster than Perez and even faster than Verstappen. He quickly undercut Perez and was about to undercut Verstappen when he came across Hamilton who slowed him down. Then Verstappen pitted and came out 1-2 seconds ahead. This seems to have been too much for the tires. The car did not have that good of a pace the rest of the race and it is likely Lando overused them thinking that the undercut will be good enough to gain places.Xyz22 wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 20:35I think Lando pushed too hard at the beginning of the second stint while the temps were still quite high, and that quickly damaged the tyres (his lap times even discounting the ones with traffic and on track battles were going up too much). Not his fault because as this situation was generated by the lack of pace over the Ferraris in the first stint.
As a matter of fact, his first flying lap in the last stint was pretty much identical to the one he made at the start of the second stint. He knew he had to keep the tyres alive for way more laps and that he probably went a bit too fast before.
Just before 2nd stop, on lap 25, Lando lapped faster than Perez. Of course he was slower than Max( who drove in free air almost all the race) but his tires were not destroyed at all, there was still decent life, good 7-8 laps at least in them. to stop behind Leclerc (whom Ferrari would obviously ask to pit immediately after mistake), giving up basically on the advantages of 2-stop strategy, was just a braindead call by Mclaren, this was purely on them. That call made no sense at all, I was screaming in front of my TV "what are you doing again!?" when I saw that. Lando's driven a great race again, outdriving Leclerc in much faster Ferrari second weekend in a row.Xyz22 wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 20:35I think Lando pushed too hard at the beginning of the second stint while the temps were still quite high, and that quickly damaged the tyres (his lap times even discounting the ones with traffic and on track battles were going up too much). Not his fault because as this situation was generated by the lack of pace over the Ferraris in the first stint.
As a matter of fact, his first flying lap in the last stint was pretty much identical to the one he made at the start of the second stint. He knew he had to keep the tyres alive for way more laps and that he probably went a bit too fast before.
That's because Perez was stuck behind Leclerc. Norris laptime was less than 0.4s quicker compared to Charles that didn't stop yet and had 25 laps old mediums. After getting rid of Leclerc, Perez lapped over 0.7s quicker than Norris last 2nd stint lap.avantman wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 20:53Just before 2nd stop, on lap 25, Lando lapped faster than Perez. Of course he was slower than Max, but his tires were not destroyed at all, there was still decent life, good 7-8 laps at least in them. to stop behind Leclerc (whom Ferrari would obviously ask to pit immediately after mistake) was just a braindead call by Mclaren, this was purely on them. That call made no sense at all, I was screaming in front of my TV "what are you doing again!?" when I saw that. Lando's driven a great race again, outdriving Leclerc in much faster Ferrari second weekend in a row.Xyz22 wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 20:35I think Lando pushed too hard at the beginning of the second stint while the temps were still quite high, and that quickly damaged the tyres (his lap times even discounting the ones with traffic and on track battles were going up too much). Not his fault because as this situation was generated by the lack of pace over the Ferraris in the first stint.
As a matter of fact, his first flying lap in the last stint was pretty much identical to the one he made at the start of the second stint. He knew he had to keep the tyres alive for way more laps and that he probably went a bit too fast before.
I do think that with hindsight, we can say they shouldn't have pit with LEC. They were worried about Russel who ended up being non factor as his pace was much worse. Norris would surely clear him easily with better tires 7-8 laps later. However at the moment, it was a completely acceptable call but maybe a little bit on cautious side (maybe they should have went opposite of LEC).avantman wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 20:53Just before 2nd stop, on lap 25, Lando lapped faster than Perez. Of course he was slower than Max( who drove in free air almost all the race) but his tires were not destroyed at all, there was still decent life, good 7-8 laps at least in them. to stop behind Leclerc (whom Ferrari would obviously ask to pit immediately after mistake), giving up basically on the advantages of 2-stop strategy, was just a braindead call by Mclaren, this was purely on them. That call made no sense at all, I was screaming in front of my TV "what are you doing again!?" when I saw that. Lando's driven a great race again, outdriving Leclerc in much faster Ferrari second weekend in a row.
Absolutely not. Mercedes had to rectify it and also Piastri was massively surprised that Leclerc did a one-stop saying it's highly likely they couldn't make it work.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 21:08I do think that with hindsight, we can say they shouldn't have pit with LEC. They were worried about Russel who ended up being non factor as his pace was much worse. Norris would surely clear him easily with better tires 7-8 laps later. However at the moment, it was a completely acceptable call but maybe a little bit on cautious side (maybe they should have went opposite of LEC).avantman wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 20:53Just before 2nd stop, on lap 25, Lando lapped faster than Perez. Of course he was slower than Max( who drove in free air almost all the race) but his tires were not destroyed at all, there was still decent life, good 7-8 laps at least in them. to stop behind Leclerc (whom Ferrari would obviously ask to pit immediately after mistake), giving up basically on the advantages of 2-stop strategy, was just a braindead call by Mclaren, this was purely on them. That call made no sense at all, I was screaming in front of my TV "what are you doing again!?" when I saw that. Lando's driven a great race again, outdriving Leclerc in much faster Ferrari second weekend in a row.
However the big question is was a one stopper a better strategy? LEC did a M-H one stopper while McLaren did a very short stint 1, but M-H-H. If they could have extended each of their hard stints by 4-5laps would they lose 20 seconds? I doubt it.
I wish if they at least tried to split strategies. In my opinion team is risk averse with strategy.
Thinking about it, maybe they would have if Piastri was better with tire management. Kept Lando on a conservative, play safe strategy, and put Piastri on a riskier one stop.
That's the point and the main problem at the same time - they are worrying about wrong targets. and how can a clearly slower, 2nd driver get better strategies week in week out? This is another problem I see.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 21:08
I do think that with hindsight, we can say they shouldn't have pit with LEC. They were worried about Russel.
I agree think, he would've cleared Leclerc at the end, but even if not, at least he'd have tried and had few goes at him. But on the same strategy he didn't even had a look once till the end. The fact he stayed with him at the end, having a car with quite clearly worse tire deg all year, just showed the quality on Lando's today's drive.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 21:08Norris would surely clear him easily with better tires 7-8 laps later.
Strongly disagree, it was completely unacceptable call at that moment in time. Just emotional overreaction, not thought through at all. I can only assume someone at Mclaren thought Leclerc whould stay on track and they will have a chance to undercut him. If true, it sadly only makes things even worse. I dunno about you, but for me it was obvious Leclerc will be in the pits no matter what at the end of that lap he made a mistake on, almost letting Lando passed by him. Ferrari now are amongst the best in the pits, so trying to jump him in the pistop was a bad idea either.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 21:08However at the moment, it was a completely acceptable call but maybe a little bit on cautious side (maybe they should have went opposite of LEC).
Is it really? How can it be that only 1 driver of 20 took a better strategy? Are all the teams in F1 that stupid you reckon? Proper, optimal 2 stop strategy was undoubtedly superior and faster today. Thing is Lando had to accept something in between, it was worst possible two stop strategy, and in his case, to do the same thing as Leclerc would've been better than what they did at the end. Stopping 2nd time on the same lap as your direct competitor on 1-stopper makes literally no sense at all.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 21:08However the big question is was a one stopper a better strategy?
Absolutely is a very strong word.Xyz22 wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 21:14Absolutely not. Mercedes had to rectify it and also Piastri was massively surprised that Leclerc did a one-stop saying it's highly likely they couldn't make it work.
Even Ferrari was extremely skeptical about the one-stop (Vasseur confirmed the 2 stops was the best strat). Pirelli didn't even include it in the possible race strategies
They went for it because overtaking was tough, pace didn't drop and there is always the possibility of a SC.
Yes. McLaren (and Mercedes) were in a unique spot where they had two sets of new hards. No one else had them. Mercedes went with that strategy and couldn't make it work but they are no where this season. Only other driver who tried it is Leclerc who had to make do with a medium. And he ended up ahead of us even though he started P8 (behind both McLaren drivers).avantman wrote: ↑07 Apr 2024, 21:23Is it really? How can it be that only 1 driver of 20 took a better strategy? Are all the teams in F1 that stupid you reckon? Proper, optimal 2 stop strategy was undoubtedly superior and faster today. Thing is Lando had to accept something in between, it was worst possible two stop strategy, and in his case, to do the same thing as Leclerc would've been better than what they did at the end. Stopping 2nd time on the same lap as your direct competitor on 1-stopper makes literally no sense at all.
Unrealistic. He only got close into the undercut range on the lap when Leclerc made that mistake, losing 2-3s. Of course it was more than obvious Ferrari will ask him to stop immediately to get rid of dirty tires, he would've been overtaken immediately into T1, had he stayed out. No Idea really, what were Mclaren thinking. How could they confuse their real battle (Leclerc) with the wrong one again, second weekend in a row.
Vasseur also said the 2 stop strategy was the best. Verstappen as well in the cooldown room.