Emag wrote: ↑22 Jun 2024, 23:12
LionsHeart wrote: ↑22 Jun 2024, 23:06
Emag wrote: ↑22 Jun 2024, 22:58
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.
How is that in atypical conditions? You just take part of the race out of the equation? It's strange to me. But all the drivers were struggling with the car at that time, making mistakes. Some more, some less, but everyone made mistakes. But this is pure piloting and concentration, the ability to feel the car in slippery conditions.
Wing angle, tyre pressure and other factors are what teams focus on. I remind you that in 2011 McLaren did poorly in qualifying because they were set up for a rain race. It could be the same here. Just take the whole race distance into account. I think that would be fair. Otherwise, I can agree with you.
Because drying conditions on a semi-wet track is far from being representative of the true potential of a car.
As a reminder, Lando was the fastest driver on track by a significant margin last year in Monaco after the rain hit the track. And that was on the MCL60 which hadn't received any of the big upgrades. Pace on a wet or semi-wet drying track tells you nothing about the true pace of the car more so than it does about driver ability to make the most out of the conditions.
Yes, I agree with that. No questions asked.
But it is a bit wrong to take into account some sections and turn a blind eye to others. After all, the race was divided into sections separated by a safety car.
You remember, I don’t like analyzing the average pace in a race, because it also doesn’t reflect the true essence. And I have already given an example before. For example, those graphs don’t take into account the number of pit stops, and they affect the average pace. And if you take into account the time at the finish, then all the pit stops will be included. It seems to be more fair here.
I can repeat my position. I still don’t think that McLaren is the fastest. But it has been consistently in the top 2 in the last five races. And this is already an indicator, since all this was on different tracks with different configurations, with a different number of slow, medium-speed and fast corners.
McLaren is now about where it was in the 2010-2012 seasons. And that's pretty much what I expected after the pre-season tests. On that side, I'm already happy with where the team is. On the other side, the team is aiming higher and wants to win here and now. Maybe they feel the time has come.