diffuser wrote: ↑17 Jun 2019, 15:51
M840TR wrote: ↑17 Jun 2019, 09:02
makecry wrote: ↑15 Jun 2019, 22:47
I like how you pick and choose. They were slower at Monaco and they were slower at Spain than Kvyat. Monaco is a chassis track. All Honda cars were slower at Canada. At Spain after such a big update, the team was slower than 2 Haas, Ricciardo and Kvyat, we just got lucky with the result because Lando's incident.
My point stands, with the number of updates McLaren has brought, they should be much further ahead in pace than they are right now. Even Zak Brown has said they are sixth fastest in the interview. Renault is bringing a major update and if it works, they are going to be clearly faster than McLaren is right now.
You might be looking at it wrong. They messed up the setup direction in Spain hence the pace. Monaco is a mechanical grip focused track and they did well to get into Q3 despite the circuit exposing their main weakness i.e low speed corners. Back on pace in Canada.
The irony is that none of the Midfield teams can differentiate themselves from the others via speed. Most of the time it comes down to the smallest thing in execution or being hurt by tire type they start the race on.
In the good rules gone bad category, The Q2 tire rule for those who make it into the Q3 is punishing the midfield teams that execute better in quali. It's getting to the point where at some races it's a distinct advantage to qualify lower. They either have to do away completely with that rule or just apply it to the top 6.
The closeness of the midfield, and field in general, makes it interesting because anyone can finish anywhere, the cars are closer so stealing 5th is more achievable than it was last year. And you're absolutely right, they're so close that the cars themselves aren't the only deciding factors. Tires, team preparation, weather, lucking into a good setup all play a part in the performance, furthermore, the drivers themselves can make a difference. They can seize critical moments should they present themselves, and small mistakes are punishing.