Do you think such reasoning is going to convince the naysayers ?TFSA wrote: ↑07 Nov 2024, 10:02The animations mostly show braking. This is not Verstappen having a faster car - this is Verstappen braking late, with everyone else braking early.mzso wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 20:50I think your animation just shows how much faster his car is compared to the backfield.
I mean he plainly just goes faster on a less advantageous line. He's not doing and special driving. That said, he did some good stuff. But mainly staying out on old tires until the race interruption is what won it for him.
The lap 1 animation shows him taking a different line, which is faster, but the other drivers don't have the confidence to take. That's just a 2016 repeat. He's not going on a less advantageous line - he just understands wet weather better than most drivers, and has the confidence to go for it. It's like that Horner quote about when Horner realized he wasn't cut out to be a racing driver, because the guy in front of him were driving in a way where he just thought "I can't do that. I don't have that confidence." I suspect many drivers feel the same way in the wet - they don't have the confidence to go for some lines that others do.
Having a car which is stable in the rain helps if course, and Red Bull was able to provide that this weekend.
People who don't/don't-want-to understand the 'tradeoff between grip and geometric lines in the wet' will never get it. Don't waste your time. Confirmation bias refusing to acknowledge talent, is not just the bane of F1 or racing or sport or the corporate world even, it's the bane of society in general.