Finally, a post worth reading. Thanks a lot of giving us some mental stimulation.
As for Leclerc and his driving in that episode, I wouldn't say Max forced him into mistake, as Charles was closer to the car ahead than to Max. It was another typical Leclerc' unforced mistake, one of many those little ones, he makes so many in every single wet race, that often comes unnoticed. When Max caught him and the group ahead, he wouldn't have any chance to overtake if Charles made no mistakes. Both overtaking opportunities came as direct consequence of mistakes. Was messing up with the white lines...either under braking or on throttle application.
Short view back in the past. 2016. The two Mercedes occupying the front row, 7 tenths ahead of the fastest Ferrari. Red bull a tenth slower. Next cars occupying the 4th row are the HAAS of Groshean and Hulk's Force India, another 4 and 6 tenths adrift respectively. That's massive for such short race track. The grid incomparably less competitive and more spread apart. Overtaking was easier than it is now for variety of reasons.
This year the field was super close and ultra competitive. Alpine in the hands of Gasly was just 0.1s slower on raw dry pace. Ferrari were at least a tenth faster. So, all 5 fastest cars within 5 tenths effectively on raw dry pace based on SQ on Friday. Within 3 tenths if we discount the fastest Mclaren (compare with 7 tenths advantage of Mercedes in '16). Yes, not quite the same as race pace but relevant for the sake of comparison.
If 2016 was spectacular show by fearless raw talent, 2024 was a true masterclass by motorsport's great conducted on the closest and the most competitive F1 field of cars and drivers of all time. By far more impressive.