In any case RBR/Verstappen/Perez rarely has a particularly bad strategy, so McLaren just needs to replicate RBR's approach to calling strategies.
In any case RBR/Verstappen/Perez rarely has a particularly bad strategy, so McLaren just needs to replicate RBR's approach to calling strategies.
We've not made as fast progress as we'd like, but soon we'll be 2nd in the WCC, and it's well deserved, despite the issues.
Online forums tend to become as emotional (or more) than the drivers. In the cold light of day (in the Southern Hemisphere) having rewatched the race and studied the timing, it's clear the pit wall is lacking winning experience. Just wait for a moment before being too critical as I was immediately post race - today was a day of days with certain unpredictabilities ebbing and flowing with the various cars' strengths and weaknesses. Excuses? Yeah maybe but when we calm down, there's no gain in throwing Will or anyone else under the bus. Looking across to the first two drivers' key personnel - it's bloody legendary, Bonno and GP, absolute legends who have fought these kind of battles a hundred times. Our guys need to keep going, deeply analyse after the race, and get better at anticipation versus reaction. All the bad calls were down to a lack of anticipation in my mind, just reacting, almost panicked into their decisions. There will be some deep discussions in the coming 10 days.venkyhere wrote: ↑08 Jul 2024, 04:22Driving talent wise, Lando is one level above, no doubt about it, but it's only 2nd year for Oscar. I can't remember how Lando was in his 2nd year.
Just from the way they interact in team radio and they way they respond in the media interviews (because there is no other insight into their personalities), Lando v Oscar :
- both are self critical and have no issues admitting to mistakes
- Oscar is far more self-assured, and has better E.Q than Lando (who is way too emotional)
- both are calm and don't show panic even when in the hot seat during the race, but Oscar is a zen-like calm.
- the way Oscar didn't blame the team or himself and brushed aside questions of 'was your race ruined by not double-stacking for inters' was commendable - very rarely do we get a driver who is fighting at the front, and isn't annoyed by the lost opportunity when a mike is thrust onto him immediately after the race.
Agreed, and building the experience of winning and the mentality that goes with it. Still the second half ahead and plenty of chances for maximising the excellent car, hopefully before Mercedes fully get their mojo back.chengzhongyi2013 wrote: ↑08 Jul 2024, 07:46From a broader perspective, this period of having a race-winning car may have come a season too early. 2025 was targeted by the team, mentioned by Lando himself. The team has arguably met its milestone targets a year early.
Still, this apparent "lack of readiness in winning championships" should not be an excuse for the operational mishaps that have plagued Mclaren harking back to the Ron Dennis days. Operationally, some fundamental changes need to be put in place to ensure that such mistakes do not happen again.
https://racingnews365.com/why-mclaren-f ... ht-in-2025
https://www.espn.com.sg/f1/story/_/id/4 ... ndo-norris