I thought (in real time) that Oscar was pressing too hard in terms of how close he was following. I wonder if his motives were to show the team that he had more pace to fight with even then. He is in a tricky position, not at all calamitous, with the points. He can't afford to let Lando accumulate a dominant points advantage else the team orders will come into play at some point. The other point is that he may figure he has an early advantage (first 3 races) where the car is possibly more with him than Lando, but that may change with updates to address the unpredictable nature of the 39.Farnborough wrote: ↑07 Apr 2025, 10:23Reasonable synopsis in combined views I feel.mwillems wrote: ↑07 Apr 2025, 09:14I don't think they will now, and apparently his new contract may say something about when he can be expected to move, but this may well be conjecture. His new contract elevates him anyway to the same or similar level to Lando and I suspect we'll see Stella talking later in the season about the difficulties of handling two number ones.AR3-GP wrote: ↑07 Apr 2025, 08:12
I understand your point and it's fair but, in that case, Mclaren can never ask Piastri to move over like last year otherwise it would just prove my point. I feel they are needlessly trapping themselves. Stella said the team comes first but they can no longer implement that without looking like hypocrites. The team did not come first in Japan for some reason... They now have to hold themselves to the fact that if Piastri cannot be granted a team order in his favor in this kind of situation, then Norris can never benefit either. This ultimately just hurts the team result.
The only issue I had with the handling of the drivers was with the pit strategy, which felt more like they were trying not to advantage one driver or another rather than going for the win.
But I get your opinion and time will tell how it pans out. Ultimately the drivers have no right to blame anyone but themselves. The car can clearly be driven fast at every corner , it's the drivers that have issues, not the car. It's peaky when driven a way it doesn't like, it seems, but that's not saying that it isn't consistent in how it needs to be driven because whilst it is peaky in the hairpin for Lando, it isn't for Oscar. And where Lando was good in T2, Oscar not so much.
If Lando says any more about the car being tricky, they should get Daniel Ricciardo in to ask if he feels sorry for him.
He needs to stop with the immature and unhelpful media remarks and just focus on the track because blaming the car is fooling no one.
A question though, do any of you feel that OP essentially wasted his tyres in close contact with LN during first stint, and tucked up behind him ?
It looks like he was trying to force the pace or internal team decision (and why not in reality) but was that clumsy and do you think he would have had more "productive" application by keeping back a little to conserve, he knowing when McL stop was likely, to then close in those laps just prior, then clean air for perhaps 3 balls out to see what he could get.
It just looked like he capped his own track and tyre position to give no option as even a possibility around pit window.
In other words, was he focused on LN and not on MV to his potential detriment ?
I'm slightly more biased to OP's side but I am fully of the opinion that it wouldn't have been right, or effective to have swapped the drivers and the risk of unsettling a potentially quite volatile team was obvious. It seems that the better McLaren, and Lando do the more grumbling happens in the media and the fan base. We have a very good car but not a dominant car, the Ferrari is a little ways back but Mercedes is solid and less than 0.2 off in qualifying on average. Russell is doing a real good job and the kid looks like he will be the next Oscar Piastri within a year. Max can not be underestimated so it will only take a difficult weekend for McLaren to struggle to even get on the podium. This is not a season of 1-2s unless some really solid updates swing it our way.