Where did they say these changes will let them fight aggressively with Mercedes? I remember Arrivabene saying that 70% of the car has changed and that was all.GPR-A wrote:
It does apply to Mercedes as well, isn't it? But, they are still moving forward, creating gap to Ferrari. SF15-T, whose early season performances evoked OVER THE TOP responses that it is a legitimate challenger to W06, but look what has happened. By their own admission, the car was supposed to be aggressively fighting with W06 with those "70% changes". Which means, the performance they were expecting, didn't come OR Mercedes outsmarted them, without major changes to the car or PU.
Well, two Ferraris finished comfortably ahead of two RBs in Spain and one Ferrari beat both the RBs in Monaco, suppose that is also shameful for a team with a budget equal to Ferrari I believe? And Williams were nowhere in Monaco and both were a lap down until the SC came to their rescue. Wonder what to say about that?GPR-A wrote:
If their updates worked, why was Williams so close in Barcelona and Mercedes so far? Two Red Bulls beat a Ferrari fair and square in Monaco. Isn't it shameful for a team with abundant budget, that you have to regard their fixing of a fundamental flaw as an achievement?
I would expect Ferrari to be competing at the sharp end next season as well no matter what the other teams do. This is an engine based formula and they have got that working reliably fast unlike other teams. McLaren couldn't do much last year even with an engine that was class of the field. Its a big IF about them coming strong next season. The gap is growing you say, yet Ferrari managed to beat a Mercedes car in Bahrain, Monaco and took a win in Malaysia as well.GPR-A wrote:
But what is happening currently, isn't anything different either. The gap to Mercedes is growing and with every passing weekend, people are accepting that there are no credible challengers to Merc and Ferrari is indeed has settled into second best team.
Are you readily discarding the fact that their rise to Second spot has nothing to do with Williams and Red Bull slipping back? On the basis of how they are performing, can you bet your life that IF (A BIG IF) Red Bull and McLaren resurge (just like ferrari did this year), Ferrari would still outperform them to retain the current position in the order?
The tokens matter because it gives them more freedom with regards to the development of the PU. Ferrari haven't sustained any reliability issues yet this year and have managed to get a win and be on the podium in the rest of the races comfortably.GPR-A wrote:
How does it matter how many tokens they spent or kept. Performance has to be the distinguishing factor and that doesn't really convinces to feel anything positive.
That the other teams have done a shoddy job isn't Ferrari's concern considering that it was their own bad job that let RB/Williams to leapfrog them last year.
Finally, this was what Wolff had to say when asked in the Q/A about the Monaco race. He considers Ferrari a real threat by his own admission and rules out artificially spicing up the championship.
Was that deliberate mistake to make the race towards championship interesting?
“Would we ever do this to the guy leading the championship with Ferrari a real threat to us? Answer: No.”