Exactly, driving is something that has to be intuitive, there can't be any thoughts standing between you and the act. In a way a driver is trying to hypnotize himself, and it's easiest to do it when things are calm with no pressure. Once conditions change a driver has to adapt, in essence re-hypnotize himself, but you can't because thoughts start getting in the way of driving. You start questioning how much slip angle you can give the tires, how hard can you break into the next corner. Some drivers don't care they have so much faith and confidence in their abilities that thoughts never cross their minds. You could see it in Spa 2008, you could see it in Canada 2011, and Hungary, and Germany of that same year, we saw it multiple times this year.timbo wrote:Feeling a car moving around is all about gut instinct.raymondu999 wrote:Yes. Prost makes it sound weird though - as if he never did seat of the pants feeling and was more about judging based on visual feedback. That's how I saw it, at least through his description of seeing the car moving and pitching. If my conclusion is correct - it could explain why Prost wasn't as good in the wet
Some people just have the speed, but can't turn it on right away. Others have the speed but can't control it. It's really a matter of being efficient, you can be fast but not quite fast enough, but maintain pace better than someone that's pushing like crazy over the long run.
I see Alonso as fitting this category, he's fast, more importantly he's consistent, so despite him not being the outright fastest guy (machinery excluded I don't think he's the fastest guy in F1) he's always in the mix because...people make mistakes.
We saw this also from Button in Interlagos, he was probably the 5th fastest car, but because everyone around him was making mistakes he took the race. He just kept pace, staying out when others were pitting, he just hung back and let everyone take themselves out.