BMMR61 wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 15:01
McLaren's protest, or whatever legalese they called that shambles, turned out to be very useful. It rallied drivers sentiments on the issue of the overtaking rules and hands down they shouted that they'd had enough. The continuum of that and the slight backdown by the FIA after the protest was rejected was encouragement for the Mexico GP stewards to take a stronger line. That and the fact that there were different persons on the steward panel and I won't name names that may be significant.
This weekend has been extremely bad news for Red Bull. On top of the clear line in the sand about divebombing and other Max approaches to driving has now got him on the back foot.
The RB20 still has serious deficiencies that haven't been fixed by the new floor, they are floundering to find the sweet spot. TBH they haven't had the car in the sweet spot for a whole weekend for a long time. With 4 GPs and 2 Sprints, 47 points is still a big hill to climb but the RB20 is looking less convincing than at almost any stage of 2024. Worse than Hungary, much worse than Monaco. It's window is now as narrow as Mercedes. McLaren's MCL38 is still a competitive car and I suspect the new floor and FW might just be able to be tuned to give that little edge to beat Ferrari.
Those are the games of F1, not sure I particularly like them but perception in F1.
Brown talking about RBR bib trick I think is purely a distraction to put pressure on RBR, -albeit I do agree Horner was very careful with his play on words it can't be changed once the car is assembled leaves out how much the car can be dissembled in parc ferme.
Horner talking about the mini DRS clamdown on McLaren, McLaren denying it but the FIA saying it happened. RBR overstating its advantage .
I don't really like that side of F1 but accept too its important these days for top teams. I think Brown in particular has worked this well for McLaren.