Just because Carlos struggled to overtake him in the sprint does not mean others can’t
Just because Carlos struggled to overtake him in the sprint does not mean others can’t
Sainz apparently seemed to have lost at least 20/25 points of downforce in the contact with Alonso. The side chute on his Ferrari is being replaced
Alonso will be a problem, AM's very quick down the straight. Might be a while before his tyres are dead enough to get past him.dia6olo wrote: ↑20 Apr 2024, 14:05There's no reason weather permitting Ferrari can't get a P3 & P4.
Over the race distance Ferrari should have plenty enough to get past the McLaren's and Alonso.
It may take a good few laps and Red Bull will be out of sight but barring incidents I fully expect a P3 & P4 finish.
I think it's inevitable they pass Alonso and Piastri, but Norris could be a tough nut to crack.
That was very "Ocon" of him.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-va ... /10601082/We lost a lot between Turn 1 and Turn 3, more than the gap to the front row, because then the rest of the lap was good. We have to understand why it went like that in qualifying, because it wasn't like that at all in Sprint, we were in good condition in that part of the track. I don't know if it's a question of preparation or the launch lap, we have to understand that, because 70% of the gap to Verstappen is there.
The race will be a long one and everyone had a fair amount of degradation, while we were in good shape at the end of the Sprint. Unfortunately it was very difficult to overtake because there was a kind of small train of cars all with DRS. Tomorrow, though, it will be different in the long race, because you can play with the strategy to get the track clear at the front and run in clean air. It was not the result we expected, but we can make up for it tomorrow.
Is this comedy time?FW17 wrote:Sainz started a lap after the red flag, should be another penalty.
https://formu1a.uno/it/ferrari-la-quali ... r-la-gara/What we saw today must therefore be considered the true potential of the current SF-24 in qualifying, also from Charles Leclerc's side, given that, unlike the previous three GPs, the Monegasque said he was more satisfied with the preparation of the tyres. "We still have a few problems but today we can't blame everything on the preparation of the tyre, on the contrary I think we have made a good step forward and more than the preparation of the tyre it is the very specific characteristics of the first sector that have limited us,"
Freaking Hulkenberg managed a 24.9 in S1LM10 wrote: ↑20 Apr 2024, 15:56Again, it seems like tyre preparation/warm up was the biggest issue today and it's apparent that this will only be solved by upgrades (or it will solve itself on hotter races obviously, like dialtone said). The deg is excellent, but the trade off between qualifying pace and race pace is too big at the moment. The goal is to get more competitive in qualifying without losing any race pace. This should be possible by adding more downforce like Vanja said last time. The key factor for tyre wear, which is the suspension design/behaviour, is spot on already and there is no reason to touch it.
Vasseur after the qualifying:
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-va ... /10601082/We lost a lot between Turn 1 and Turn 3, more than the gap to the front row, because then the rest of the lap was good. We have to understand why it went like that in qualifying, because it wasn't like that at all in Sprint, we were in good condition in that part of the track. I don't know if it's a question of preparation or the launch lap, we have to understand that, because 70% of the gap to Verstappen is there.
The race will be a long one and everyone had a fair amount of degradation, while we were in good shape at the end of the Sprint. Unfortunately it was very difficult to overtake because there was a kind of small train of cars all with DRS. Tomorrow, though, it will be different in the long race, because you can play with the strategy to get the track clear at the front and run in clean air. It was not the result we expected, but we can make up for it tomorrow.
That's if you believe that the qualifying times Ferrari set today were the true pace of the car (meaning tyres were in the window). For me it's obvious this wasn't the case.CouncilorIrissa wrote: ↑20 Apr 2024, 18:122.5 tenth Imola upgrade does not look that hot anymore, does it?
That's not enough to cut RB's advantage even in half, and that's without Red Bull's upgrades of their own.