LionsHeart wrote: ↑22 Jun 2024, 22:54
Emag wrote: ↑22 Jun 2024, 22:25
From a personal standpoint, it's hard for me to claim McLaren has the outright best car, when they fall off at certain conditions. As I mentioned before, in Imola the first stint was not good. Canada as well, the dry stint was not good on pure pace, with Mercedes and Max being the obvious faster car. And here, I was quite happy after qualifying, but then Lando said the car was nervous on the high speed and we has leaving time on the table all weekend playing it safe. It took him going all out to barely pip Max. It could have gone wrong, and the vibe here would be quite a bit different, with people probably blaming Lando for fumbling it again on Q3.
Then on the other side, you look at Max and he is comfortable pushing the limits all the way through. It just makes me think that he will perhaps be able to get laptime easier and more consistently tomorrow in the race. But also, as I said, I would love it to be wrong.
Your position is somewhat one-sided. In that case, I would say that Max's pace in the second stint was worse than Lando's in Imola. In Montreal, in the rain, Lando was faster, but he saved his tires, and then in the drying conditions he drove faster.
Unless you look at it from that perspective, you can say that Red Bull is faster and McLaren is slower. You have to look at the whole picture, not just pick out individual things.
But I can't pick out those, because they were not relevant for the whole race result. Max was slow on the second stint, but only towards the end. And how much can you attribute that to McLaren being better on the hard tires and how much was it RedBull not optimizing their car?
In Canada, Lando was quickest in the most quirkiest and unrepresentative of true pace track conditions. He simply took care of the intermediates better than the others and he could push it more at the end when track was drying. And also, people forget to mention McLaren actually started the race with more front wing downforce, something the others were able to fix only after the first round of pitstops (which could explain why the pace advantage disappeared on the second intermediate stint).
I would absolutely take those points into consideration, if they were the deciding factor on giving a race win to McLaren. But they weren't. The weak moments were more relevant for the final race results.