To hang in Piastri’s dirty air for 30+ laps on the hards means he had great pace. He lost the lead due to slow tyre warmup, but once they got into their working window he was clearly at least as fast as Piastri, if not faster. He just got poor drive out of turn 16 where he needed it and lacked the top speed to overtake.codetower wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 20:49
I'm not convinced Ferrari had "comfortably" the fastest car on the grid. Leclerc was comfortably fastest on the S, and was fastest on the M, but McLaren was very quick on the H. Ferrari had trouble getting the Hards in the right window, and just didn't have the same pace as McLaren.
But yeah, I can see Ferrari being strong here. My optimistic prediction is 1. LEC, 2. PIA... I think we're witnessing the start of an incredible driver battle for the next couple of years.
Ferrari might not have had as large of a pace advantage on the hards compared to the softs or mediums, but I’d argue the car was still clearly had the best race pace on both compounds. Leclerc was just stuck between a rock and a hard place where he couldn’t slow down to preserve his tyres because Perez was breathing up his neck, but also couldn’t overtake Piastri without having a tyre wear offset.
I reckon Leclerc wins if Perez is slower because he could drop back to 2-3 seconds behind, preserve his tyres and then make a late push like Perez did. He was incredibly unlucky to get stuck in that sandwich.