geogate wrote: ↑18 May 2024, 22:29
funny to see just how quickly everyone has got used to actually being right up there with Red Bull, and if anything, faster - that Mclaren made them really uncomfortable. Are you lot sure you are taking a moment to just enjoy what is happening? It is remarkable
I am waiting for the race tomorrow, but honestly this is absolutely crazy what this team has gone through in the last year or so.
I remember how dire the situation looked when 2023 got going last year. It was just sad to see how far off they had fallen. Seidl was gone, Key was gone. It just didn't look good combined with the performance on track. As it turned out, both of those people leaving was a blessing in disguise. Stella wouldn't have had the chance to shine otherwise.
It was pretty much the same team of people that developed the 2023 car that also made that car go from bottom-midfield to top-3 with that Austria upgrade. Stella directing things for pure efficiency, with Peter Prodromou getting the freedom to lead the aerodynamics direction, and look what that team has done.
Important hires have joined that team now, but some fantastic, previously under-utilized people still remain there and have done a fantastic job. In my relatively short memory of following this sport, I don't recall any team doing what McLaren has done this past year or so.
To go from backmarker, to podium-contender and now to a win-contender, all unfolding in 1 year or so is just so crazy impressive, I don't think they are getting enough credit for it. They keep delivering these huge upgrade packages that just propel the car forward every time.
You're right, fighting with the RedBull became a "normal" too quickly and it seems like people forgot the journey this team has been in to get here. It's nothing short of a miracle and Ferrari and Mercedes are just proving how hard it is to consistently improve the car at such big margins like what McLaren has done.
Just a reminder to some people. This is what the picture was like in Bahrain this year:
It's fun to get carried away in this competitiveness, but realistically speaking, they could have been P5 and P6 today and it still that would have been an objectively good result for a team which was unremarkably in the midfield throughout the whole 2022. Started 2023 as a proper backmarker, but ended it as the 3rd (which at times was the 2nd) fastest car and managed to carry that through for 2024.
And as I said, Aston, Mercedes and Ferrari are proof of how hard that is to do.