No I disagree.
Indeed. Seen articles stating that RedBull's strategy was brilliant. But they actually wanted Max to hang back. Doing so would have given the Mercs half a chance. By deciding to attack immediately, Max put himself ahead on track and in a position to use his tyres to the full.
Goes to show that sometimes, in spite of all the data they have, the driver can still 'feel' better what the tires are capable of.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Aug 2020, 10:27Indeed. Seen articles stating that RedBull's strategy was brilliant. But they actually wanted Max to hang back. Doing so would have given the Mercs half a chance. By deciding to attack immediately, Max put himself ahead on track and in a position to use his tyres to the full.
It was an instinctive thing and it might have gone wrong, but it didn't and so has gone in to the pantheon of brilliant driving moments.
That and the confidence to say "no" to the team at key moments. The best drivers can and do do this and it can make the difference as we've seen on a number of occasions.DChemTech wrote: ↑11 Aug 2020, 10:56Goes to show that sometimes, in spite of all the data they have, the driver can still 'feel' better what the tires are capable of.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Aug 2020, 10:27Indeed. Seen articles stating that RedBull's strategy was brilliant. But they actually wanted Max to hang back. Doing so would have given the Mercs half a chance. By deciding to attack immediately, Max put himself ahead on track and in a position to use his tyres to the full.
It was an instinctive thing and it might have gone wrong, but it didn't and so has gone in to the pantheon of brilliant driving moments.
Well, your flaw is that you assume that mercedes was trying to win the race
I never said the strategies were masterful. I said it came together in a masterful way, and the person to make it happen was Max Verstappen.
Indeed, very important to dare to say no - or in Max's case, "not gonna drive like a grandma" (and in Kimi's case, "bwoah")Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Aug 2020, 11:00That and the confidence to say "no" to the team at key moments. The best drivers can and do do this and it can make the difference as we've seen on a number of occasions.DChemTech wrote: ↑11 Aug 2020, 10:56Goes to show that sometimes, in spite of all the data they have, the driver can still 'feel' better what the tires are capable of.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Aug 2020, 10:27
Indeed. Seen articles stating that RedBull's strategy was brilliant. But they actually wanted Max to hang back. Doing so would have given the Mercs half a chance. By deciding to attack immediately, Max put himself ahead on track and in a position to use his tyres to the full.
It was an instinctive thing and it might have gone wrong, but it didn't and so has gone in to the pantheon of brilliant driving moments.
I agree. It was rather the driver than the pitwall...both pitwalls tried to not win this race.Phil wrote: ↑11 Aug 2020, 11:14I never said the strategies were masterful. I said it came together in a masterful way, and the person to make it happen was Max Verstappen.
.....
The brilliance of RedBulls strategy was to qualify in Q2 on the hard tire and I'm still baffled Mercedes didn't try to cover .....
Was that extra pit even necessary, other than to prop up Stroll Jr?
That’s fair - good point!Just_a_fan wrote: ↑10 Aug 2020, 10:39Thinking back over the last week, the irony is that Max was helped to win yesterday by the Mercedes's tyre failures last week. If there hadn't been failures, the tyre pressures probably wouldn't have been changed and Mercedes would have likely had an easier time of it during the race. Not saying Max wouldn't have won anyway with the tyres raced and the temps experienced - he probably would have, but it might have been a harder battle than it was yesterday. One of those funny little things that life throws up now and then.
Spanish GP 2019 (C1, C2, C3): Front - 22.5 PSI ; Rear - 20.5 PSI