ispano6 wrote:Manoah2u wrote: ↑01 Apr 2019, 01:51
Nothing happened, he gets away without penalty. He mentioned he did not mount the wheel because he didn't want to get electrocuted and the red warning light was flashing, giving him all the right to refuse so.
painful to see what happened to both renaults, and sainz last race. also pretty disappointing for sainz to have another DNF.
He had a great run and at more than 1 point was faster than Max, so a 4th place finish perhaps even 3rd would have been possible.
regarding Mclaren's pace, i'm wondering, whether Alonso has made a mistake. I know he wants to win, but looking into Sainz' possible finish,
and Norris' actual finish, i'm shocked on how Mclaren has seemingly put themselves into podium territory, even if luck was needed there
with a Vettel spin and a Leclerc car malfunctioning. Mercedes was lucky just as well, and got a 1-2 there. So kudos to Mclaren.
I doubt Sainz would have kept up with Max for the 2nd stint, considering how far back the fastest Renault powered car was from him prior to the safety car. Max was only 6seconds behind Bottas and over 30sec ahead of Norris. And if Sainz had pushed to keep up with Max it still isn't guaranteed that he would have finished the race at that pace.
People here seem to want to think RB15 is a good car and that its the engine holding it back, when the drivers are complaining the car slides and Marko himself says the chassis is far from optimal or ideal.
Truth is RB15 is not extracting its potential and it will take some time to remedy. Horner said the car should see 8 to 9 evolutions during the season, so the fact that Max has finished 3rd and 4th speaks volumes to his ability to will his way around. He and Honda are keeping themselves in the fight early on in the season which is exactly what they need now.
Your analysis in regards to the time delta between car’s isn’t a representation of the actual performance of each team... Verstappen was 30 seconds from Hamilton before the Safety Car and 42 seconds behind Leclerc before the latter one started having issues.
The fact that Norris was 30 seconds behind Verstappen by the end of the race is more a result of Norris having drop to 15th in lap 1 and had to fight his way through the field, stuck some times in DRS trains... While Verstappen was driving in clean air with no one to fight in front or behind him... Those are 2 different races for each driver and responsible for the delta more than the performance of the car themselves.
Probably a more comparable set would be with Gasly, who was in that midfield pack (actually ahead of Norris by the end of lap 1) and who finished behind him.
You are entitle to your opinion about Sainz being able to keep Verstappen’s pace and you would be “as right” as someone saying that if Sainz would have made the move stick, he would have kept Verstappen behind all race... Reality is both scenario’s are probable and no one really knows what would have happened.
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