LM10 wrote: ↑27 Apr 2024, 00:36
Xyz22 wrote: ↑26 Apr 2024, 23:54
I've seen people arguing that getting Wachè or Balbo would be better than Newey.
This is completely wrong. There is no one that is even remotely close to Adrian Newey in Formula 1 in taking the key project decisions, especially when there is a massive regulations change. Newey would be the perfect addition to Ferrari technical team as he would be the overall Technical Supervisor of the entire project, meaning he would set the base concept/idea of the car (i.e. downwash concept for the 22 regs, overall suspension layout, etc.). This is where Ferrari have been lacking a lot in the last few years. Getting the key decision wrong at the project's outset can have serious consequence. It doesn't really matter how good the technical team is (all the engineers, etc.), the car won't be competitive.
Newey's contribution to Ferrari's success would no doubt be there if he joined and I would love to see him in the team, but you're exaggerating. Ferrari does not desperately need him. They've shown that they are capable of building a race-winning car especially after a big regulation change like in 2017 or 2022. Their biggest disadvantage in 2017 was the PU and in 2022 the F1-75 was the best car out of the box - fast on all types of tracks and in all conditions, completely stable despite porpoising (in fact the only stable car under porpoising). It only lacked race pace, but without TD039 it would have only been a matter of time to improve it. The TD put them behind massively, however they've still managed to come back strong. Just look at this year's car.
Regarding the F1 75 i don't agree they would have fixed the tyre wear. The F1 75 had simply way more peak downforce than the RB18b at the start of the season (remember that Ferrari spent the entire budget on the 2022 car and started earlier than RB which had less wind tunnel hours, less money and less time due to the fact that they developed the RB16b for many months). This is why the car was also competitive in race trim at the beginning, as Leclerc was able to manage the pace and still be either quicker or on par with the RB. The TD 039 and the changes for 2023 completely destroyed the concept of that car, and yet again Ferrari took the wrong decision during the 2022 season. They should have understood that the best option was to switch to the downwash concept in order to start understanding it but they didn't, which perfectly highlights the weakness of the Team.
Fixing high tyre wear is also extremely complicated. Not even Mercedes in 2013 was able to do it despite illegal tests with Pirelli. Yes they were very competitive in some tracks but nowhere in others. In 2023 Ferrari improved the situation by really managing the pace in key parts of the race, with upgrades aimed at making the car more stable, etc. but they never fixed the issue entirely. Only with a completely new chassis they changed the behaviour of the car.
I'm not saying that Ferrari project leaders are not good. I'm saying that Newey would improve the Team massively, especially in that particular area. It would also reduce the pressure on Cardile and the others, which could end up in them performing even better during the design/development stage.