Best quote in 60 pages !!
You can say that loud. Never seen a driver voluntarily beach their car on the formation lap.FrukostScones wrote:Finally a race that brought back a bit a fun like experienced in 2008 or 2012.
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.
.
.Longread: Ocon, Marko and Wolff, Max Verstappen bluffed everyone on wet Norisring
They were both there, there on the Norisring: Helmut Marko for Red Bull and Toto Wolff for Mercedes. To watch Verstappen, who showed his exceptional class in a rainy Formula 3 race. That was in 2014. Among others, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff spent his free weekend between the GPs of Austria and Great Britain there and Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko had also circled the race in red. It was no coincidence that these were also the two who had a special interest in Verstappen since they saw him string together victories in the karts.
Despite all those extra eyes on him, Vernooij did not notice anything special about Verstappen. "Max was always calm anyway. I never noticed any form of stress in him," he says.
Max started the day by following the Porsche Carrera race with fascination, to see where the dry spots were on the track where he would later drive himself. He even had to be taken away from the TV, otherwise he would have missed the second race. In that race, he started on dry weather tires and dominated from the first meters. When it suddenly started to rain and one car after another shot off the track, the race was temporarily stopped halfway through.
According to engineer Vernooij, there was more stress in the garage than in the cockpit in that race. “At the Norisring, there is a lot of slipstreaming. If you lose the gap because of that red flag, the rest have a chance to catch up again.” Nevertheless, Vernooij was able to sit back quickly, because after the restart,
Verstappen on rain tires gained one and a half seconds on the rest lap after lap. “Really unbelievable on a lap of about 50 seconds.”
Despite the rain, red flag and three safety car situations, Verstappen finished almost nine seconds ahead of number two. He ended the weekend in style by also winning race three. In this way, he became the first driver ever to win six races in a row in the European Formula 3 championship.
Red Bull talent scout Marko had never seen a junior excel in so many changing circumstances. That Sunday afternoon, he dialed the phone number of Jos Verstappen, who missed the last day of the race weekend because of a race demonstration at the Zandvoort circuit, to make him an offer that he could not refuse: "Forget everything we discussed, he has to go to Formula 1."
.
I also belong to the group that thinks it was a good drive, not great. Not a worship worthy drive. His 2016 drive was great. RB20 is no inferior car, but RB12 was. Michael's 1996 Spanish GP tops the chart of great drives. At times, he was 5 to 6 seconds faster than the dominant Williams of the year. That's worthy of worship performance.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 11:39mzso 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 RB20 was the best car in Sao Paulo?! So RBR used a magic wand after the Mexican GP in those 4 days, because then the car was by far the slowest car of the top teams. That must be it, because otherwise you can't suddenly drive 1-2 sec per lap faster than the rest. That can NEVER be due to the brilliant driving style of the driver, right?!
Then I have news for you, which you most likely know just like every F1 fan, but here you have reading material about the fact why Max was allowed to drive in F1 at the age of 17.
..Longread: Ocon, Marko and Wolff, Max Verstappen bluffed everyone on wet Norisring
They were both there, there on the Norisring: Helmut Marko for Red Bull and Toto Wolff for Mercedes. To watch Verstappen, who showed his exceptional class in a rainy Formula 3 race. That was in 2014. Among others, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff spent his free weekend between the GPs of Austria and Great Britain there and Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko had also circled the race in red. It was no coincidence that these were also the two who had a special interest in Verstappen since they saw him string together victories in the karts.
Despite all those extra eyes on him, Vernooij did not notice anything special about Verstappen. "Max was always calm anyway. I never noticed any form of stress in him," he says.
Max started the day by following the Porsche Carrera race with fascination, to see where the dry spots were on the track where he would later drive himself. He even had to be taken away from the TV, otherwise he would have missed the second race. In that race, he started on dry weather tires and dominated from the first meters. When it suddenly started to rain and one car after another shot off the track, the race was temporarily stopped halfway through.
According to engineer Vernooij, there was more stress in the garage than in the cockpit in that race. “At the Norisring, there is a lot of slipstreaming. If you lose the gap because of that red flag, the rest have a chance to catch up again.” Nevertheless, Vernooij was able to sit back quickly, because after the restart,
Verstappen on rain tires gained one and a half seconds on the rest lap after lap. “Really unbelievable on a lap of about 50 seconds.”
Despite the rain, red flag and three safety car situations, Verstappen finished almost nine seconds ahead of number two. He ended the weekend in style by also winning race three. In this way, he became the first driver ever to win six races in a row in the European Formula 3 championship.
Red Bull talent scout Marko had never seen a junior excel in so many changing circumstances. That Sunday afternoon, he dialed the phone number of Jos Verstappen, who missed the last day of the race weekend because of a race demonstration at the Zandvoort circuit, to make him an offer that he could not refuse: "Forget everything we discussed, he has to go to Formula 1."
And all that in a car that was far from the best in the field.
..
You probably also missed how many F1 team bosses and (former) drivers praised Max in recent days for how he drove.
They worship him for that. That he has shown that he is the best on the grid. Surely all Max fans too?!
.Dunlay wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 14:15.
I also belong to the group that thinks it was a good drive, not great. Not a worship worthy drive.
I believe Max and Lewis are the top 2 wet weather drivers on the grid. But they need a good car to show the skills,
like Lewis demonstrated in Brazil last week. Bad car, stupid the driver looks, good car, better the driver looks.
How many wet races has Max won in bad cars (considering 2016 to 2020 RBs were all bad cars)? One (2019 Germany)? He bottled 2020 Turkey while having a good car that day, finsihing just one second ahead of a struggling Albon.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 15:08.Dunlay wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 14:15.
I also belong to the group that thinks it was a good drive, not great. Not a worship worthy drive.
I believe Max and Lewis are the top 2 wet weather drivers on the grid. But they need a good car to show the skills,
like Lewis demonstrated in Brazil last week. Bad car, stupid the driver looks, good car, better the driver looks.
I am glad Toto, Russell and Lewis and many, many more were so honest to say his drive was suberb. They didn't downplay his skills.
Max doesn't need the best car to show his skills as you can read in my long post above.
That Lewis needs a great car to show his skills showed when you saw the difference between Russell and Lewis.
Russell was way better than Lewis in the same car in SP.
He span 7 times in that race with a car that's notoriously got a loose rear. It's quite likely that whatever window it had that day did not make it a good car..Dunlay wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 15:23How many wet races has Max won in bad cars (considering 2016 to 2020 RBs were all bad cars)? One (2019 Germany)? He bottled 2020 Turkey while having a good car that day, finsihing just one second ahead of a struggling Albon.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 15:08.Dunlay wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 14:15
.
I also belong to the group that thinks it was a good drive, not great. Not a worship worthy drive.
I believe Max and Lewis are the top 2 wet weather drivers on the grid. But they need a good car to show the skills,
like Lewis demonstrated in Brazil last week. Bad car, stupid the driver looks, good car, better the driver looks.
I am glad Toto, Russell and Lewis and many, many more were so honest to say his drive was suberb. They didn't downplay his skills.
Max doesn't need the best car to show his skills as you can read in my long post above.
That Lewis needs a great car to show his skills showed when you saw the difference between Russell and Lewis.
Russell was way better than Lewis in the same car in SP.
Good results, it's all driver. Bad results, it's the car. I have heard that so much on Mercedes thread. 4 races later that season, that car comfortably won in Abu Dhabi from pole to win.organic wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 15:34He span 7 times in that race with a car that's notoriously got a loose rear. It's quite likely that whatever window it had that day did not make it a good car..Dunlay wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 15:23How many wet races has Max won in bad cars (considering 2016 to 2020 RBs were all bad cars)? One (2019 Germany)? He bottled 2020 Turkey while having a good car that day, finsihing just one second ahead of a struggling Albon.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 15:08
.
I am glad Toto, Russell and Lewis and many, many more were so honest to say his drive was suberb. They didn't downplay his skills.
Max doesn't need the best car to show his skills as you can read in my long post above.
That Lewis needs a great car to show his skills showed when you saw the difference between Russell and Lewis.
Russell was way better than Lewis in the same car in SP.
Max gained 5 places that he didn't have to work for because of redflag rule yet everyone is up in arms in giving him credits ,we know that he is a good driver he doesn't need that.Norris was right he got luck he wasn't being bitter.by changing tires under safety you afford 25 second penalty and the risk and tire usage that comes from having to actually overtake cars.Dunlay wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 14:15I also belong to the group that thinks it was a good drive, not great. Not a worship worthy drive. His 2016 drive was great. RB20 is no inferior car, but RB12 was. Michael's 1996 Spanish GP tops the chart of great drives. At times, he was 5 to 6 seconds faster than the dominant Williams of the year. That's worthy of worship performance.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 11:39mzso 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 RB20 was the best car in Sao Paulo?! So RBR used a magic wand after the Mexican GP in those 4 days, because then the car was by far the slowest car of the top teams. That must be it, because otherwise you can't suddenly drive 1-2 sec per lap faster than the rest. That can NEVER be due to the brilliant driving style of the driver, right?!
Then I have news for you, which you most likely know just like every F1 fan, but here you have reading material about the fact why Max was allowed to drive in F1 at the age of 17.
..Longread: Ocon, Marko and Wolff, Max Verstappen bluffed everyone on wet Norisring
They were both there, there on the Norisring: Helmut Marko for Red Bull and Toto Wolff for Mercedes. To watch Verstappen, who showed his exceptional class in a rainy Formula 3 race. That was in 2014. Among others, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff spent his free weekend between the GPs of Austria and Great Britain there and Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko had also circled the race in red. It was no coincidence that these were also the two who had a special interest in Verstappen since they saw him string together victories in the karts.
Despite all those extra eyes on him, Vernooij did not notice anything special about Verstappen. "Max was always calm anyway. I never noticed any form of stress in him," he says.
Max started the day by following the Porsche Carrera race with fascination, to see where the dry spots were on the track where he would later drive himself. He even had to be taken away from the TV, otherwise he would have missed the second race. In that race, he started on dry weather tires and dominated from the first meters. When it suddenly started to rain and one car after another shot off the track, the race was temporarily stopped halfway through.
According to engineer Vernooij, there was more stress in the garage than in the cockpit in that race. “At the Norisring, there is a lot of slipstreaming. If you lose the gap because of that red flag, the rest have a chance to catch up again.” Nevertheless, Vernooij was able to sit back quickly, because after the restart,
Verstappen on rain tires gained one and a half seconds on the rest lap after lap. “Really unbelievable on a lap of about 50 seconds.”
Despite the rain, red flag and three safety car situations, Verstappen finished almost nine seconds ahead of number two. He ended the weekend in style by also winning race three. In this way, he became the first driver ever to win six races in a row in the European Formula 3 championship.
Red Bull talent scout Marko had never seen a junior excel in so many changing circumstances. That Sunday afternoon, he dialed the phone number of Jos Verstappen, who missed the last day of the race weekend because of a race demonstration at the Zandvoort circuit, to make him an offer that he could not refuse: "Forget everything we discussed, he has to go to Formula 1."
And all that in a car that was far from the best in the field.
..
You probably also missed how many F1 team bosses and (former) drivers praised Max in recent days for how he drove.
They worship him for that. That he has shown that he is the best on the grid. Surely all Max fans too?!
I believe Max and Lewis are the top 2 wet weather drivers on the grid. But they need a good car to show the skills, like Lewis demonstrated in Brazil last week. Bad car, stupid the driver looks, good car, better the driver looks.
Major complaints on the situation are coming from people who have this issue in multiple races. Ok, in the last six years there were only two mid-race red flags, so the statistics is low.Bill wrote: ↑11 Nov 2024, 07:14Max gained 5 places that he didn't have to work for because of redflag rule yet everyone is up in arms in giving him credits ,we know that he is a good driver he doesn't need that.Norris was right he got luck he wasn't being bitter.by changing tires under safety you afford 25 second penalty and the risk and tire usage that comes from having to actually overtake cars.
.Bill wrote: ↑11 Nov 2024, 07:14.Dunlay wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 14:15.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 11:39The RB20 was the best car in Sao Paulo?! So RBR used a magic wand after the Mexican GP in those 4 days, because then the car was by far the slowest car of the top teams. That must be it, because otherwise you can't suddenly drive 1-2 sec per lap faster than the rest. That can NEVER be due to the brilliant driving style of the driver, right?!
Then I have news for you, which you most likely know just like every F1 fan, but here you have reading material about the fact why Max was allowed to drive in F1 at the age of 17.
.
And all that in a car that was far from the best in the field.
.
You probably also missed how many F1 team bosses and (former) drivers praised Max in recent days for how he drove.
They worship him for that. That he has shown that he is the best on the grid. Surely all Max fans too?!
I also belong to the group that thinks it was a good drive, not great. Not a worship worthy drive. His 2016 drive was great. RB20 is no inferior car, but RB12 was. Michael's 1996 Spanish GP tops the chart of great drives. At times, he was 5 to 6 seconds faster than the dominant Williams of the year. That's worthy of worship performance.
I believe Max and Lewis are the top 2 wet weather drivers on the grid. But they need a good car to show the skills, like Lewis demonstrated in Brazil last week. Bad car, stupid the driver looks, good car, better the driver looks.
Max gained 5 places that he didn't have to work for because of redflag rule yet everyone is up in arms in giving him credits ,we know that he is a good driver he doesn't need that.
Norris was right he got luck he wasn't being bitter.
by changing tires under safety you afford 25 second penalty and the risk and tire usage that comes from having to actually overtake cars.