WCC points after 10 races:
2004 - 383 (latest points system)
2007 - 275 (latest points system)
2017 - 275
2022 - 265
2024 - 270
After two hard weekends, season 2024 is basically aligned with 07, 17 and 22, it's interesting to keep track like this because you see how the scoring dynamic shifts wildly
Ferrari should be thankful to McLaren drivers for keeping P2 in WCC in these two weekends, MCL38 is right up there with RB20 at the moment. Norris proves to be incapable of standing up for himself in any meaningful duel and Piastri is quite inconsistent in races.
This was definitely a suboptimal weekend, updates helped in some ways and didn't work in others. Seems like bouncing will need to be sorted carefully and we know solving this properly can unlock 2-3 tenths, which is what Vasseur suggests when saying they didn't extract the maximum. They were smart to push to the limit, there are a lot of options with suspension setup to take care of this without losing performance as we've seen many times in the last 2.5 years. Curious how RB, McL and Merc all moved towards Q setups between 23 and 24 and Ferrari went the other way too much.
Strategies were ok, there was nothing special to invent there. As for drivers, Sainz squeezing and pushing Leclerc more than others is nothing new, deciding not to follow previous agreements with the team is nothing new. Hopefully it stops now that Spain is behind us, but I have a feeling it will actually only get worse... Vasseur will not have an easy time with him until the end of the year. As for his pace, he was abysmal on Mediums and was matching Russell on Hards.
Leclerc's consistency in the race completely matched Verstappen and Lando even if the car was slower overall, he was actually quicker on Mediums than Max which is explained by fuel offset and was completely matching Norris in 2nd stint.
His entire 20s gap was generated in the first stint, as soon as he switched to Mediums the gap had only minor variations. At the same time, as soon as Sainz pitted his pace improved by 6-7 tenths at least.
Unusually moderate temperatures for early summer in Barcelona helped Mercedes massively and Ferrari (well, Leclerc) suffered getting stuck behind them in the first stint, as was expected. If they can improve their Q pace in colder conditions and fix the bouncing this week in the simulator, they can fight at the top in Austria. As we noticed here a while ago, track position at the start is a huge thing again and focus on Qualifying is crucial.