Xyz22 wrote: ↑21 Sep 2024, 19:04
The execution of this quali session was some of the worst i've ever seen in my lifetime. The preparation for Leclerc Q3 lap was awful.
Tyres were out of the window on a regular basis, Sainz was nowhere who is usually very fast in this track and so on.
Sainz messed up himself and team messed up Leclerc. It happened regularly 2 years ago and ocassionaly last year, there were far worse Q3 sessions in several seasons in the last 10 years.
Sainz was nowhere the whole weekend, he wouldn't have broken past P5 in any case. This isn't his special track, he qualified ahead of Norris in 2019 because Norris messed up in Q3 (and set the fastest lap between them in Q2) and was only quicker than Leclerc last year because severe understeer of the car suited him and hampered Leclerc. In the race in 2022 he was lapping 5 tenths slower than Leclerc, who was considerably slowed down by Perez
codetower wrote: ↑21 Sep 2024, 19:44
The problem I see with starting on softs is that you are almost forcing yourself into a 2-stopper. It’s not worth it to jump Alonzo. If you get an early Red Flag, everyone is switching, if it comes after lap 15 or so, you lose out. M-H theres no advantage. Everyone will be on that. The only gamble i see is starting on hards, going long and hoping theres a SC or Red flag AFTER the front runners have pitted.
Exactly, they need to save Softs for the final stint and see what simulations say on how best to reach it. I wouldn't risk with Hards, they could be tricky to heat up with a slow and heavy car in a night race. Mediums on a moderate pace (2-3s behind slower cars the whole time) should easily last well over half a race and Softs can also be managed to last at least 20 laps, like Leclerc did even last year