I was never that impressed by Vandoorne the way I was impressed by others, more a junior career like Gasly, Bottas and Sainz, needing multiple years in a serie to have succes. He also didn’t make a real dent in Super Formula, with lots of oldish drivers.Phil wrote: ↑17 Aug 2020, 16:22I'm also not convinced that Russel would clearly do a better job than Bottas. As an example; Alonso had numerous team mates and he pretty much slaughtered them all, one by one. Massa, Kimi, Stoffel. Arguably to a much larger degree than Bottas has ever been beaten by Hamilton.
Given that many consider Hamilton and Alonso to be in a league of their own (and Verstappen most possibly in that same list who is also pretty much slaughtering his team-mates, at least bar Riccardo), there is really no guarantee that Russel would do any better than Bottas currently is. I am yet to see compelling arguments in favor of Russel other than that he was great in F2 (as Stoffel has been, until facing up with Alonso) and that most are bored of Hamilton/Mercedes domination and demand a stronger team-mate for him.
Speaking of which; Ocon, who I believe is still contracted to Mercedes and on loan to Renault, well, considering his performance against Ricciardo currently, I really fear for him once Alonso will be in the other car come next year.
As long as they don’t put Verstappen next to him for some Senna-Prost 88-89 action, I think Russell will need at least 22 and 23 to be on top of the car and team. Hamilton would be 38 then and could leave on a high or do a Rossi and just enjoy racing the best cars ever.
I think Russell is destined for a seat and not Verstappen atm. Either way I could see both dethroning him, he's not getting any younger and Bottas is now closer to him performance wise that he's ever been.Jolle wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 22:56As long as they don’t put Verstappen next to him for some Senna-Prost 88-89 action, I think Russell will need at least 22 and 23 to be on top of the car and team. Hamilton would be 38 then and could leave on a high or do a Rossi and just enjoy racing the best cars ever.
"They didn't, unfortunately, do a great job with a tyre at the end of last year, to develop the 2020 tyre.
"And so we had to carry over the same tyre from 2019 into this season.
"In the past when they made the target letter, the drivers were not a part of that discussion.
"And so that's why last year I went to the meeting in Paris, as part of representing the drivers.
"We want to help them make sure that they set the target letter correctly. It's not been done right for a long time.
Many people think, having fast degrading tires is good as it allows for more pit stops and a lot of strategies at play. The one think people forget is, the more fragile the tires they bring, the more management drivers would do, making slower races. Every driver would want to extend the stints and hence, goes slower.dans79 wrote: ↑19 Aug 2020, 06:40Hamilton is really giving it to Pirelli, The FIA, and Liberty.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/15149 ... al-to-fans
"They didn't, unfortunately, do a great job with a tyre at the end of last year, to develop the 2020 tyre.
"And so we had to carry over the same tyre from 2019 into this season.
"In the past when they made the target letter, the drivers were not a part of that discussion.
"And so that's why last year I went to the meeting in Paris, as part of representing the drivers.
"We want to help them make sure that they set the target letter correctly. It's not been done right for a long time.
There are probably factor behind the scenes in play we do not know of too. One that comes to mind is lap time falling below 1 min. They already catch the tail quite soon, and once the pit stops start the track gets crowded.Moore77 wrote: ↑19 Aug 2020, 09:46Many people think, having fast degrading tires is good as it allows for more pit stops and a lot of strategies at play. The one think people forget is, the more fragile the tires they bring, the more management drivers would do, making slower races. Every driver would want to extend the stints and hence, goes slower.dans79 wrote: ↑19 Aug 2020, 06:40Hamilton is really giving it to Pirelli, The FIA, and Liberty.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/15149 ... al-to-fans
"They didn't, unfortunately, do a great job with a tyre at the end of last year, to develop the 2020 tyre.
"And so we had to carry over the same tyre from 2019 into this season.
"In the past when they made the target letter, the drivers were not a part of that discussion.
"And so that's why last year I went to the meeting in Paris, as part of representing the drivers.
"We want to help them make sure that they set the target letter correctly. It's not been done right for a long time.
Instead of millions being spent on experimenting with tires, they should simply make 3 compound use mandatory in races and provide better tires that drivers can push and race closely, without having to worry about degradation. I don't think Pirelli will ever achieve a high performing tire, that suddenly falls off the cliff. So far in their attempt, they have only produced tires that blow up after having gone certain distance.
For God's sake, Pirelli should make tires that can provide better show with under 20 PSI pressures. What is the point of having wider tires, that are supposed to provide better grip, but due the high pressures, starts losing contact patch, causing reduced grip. What is then the point of carrying such big tires, that are ultimately a liability with their huge weight without serving the primary objective for which they were brought.
https://gtspirit.com/wp-content/uploads ... -Tires.jpg
I don't think that changes much though? It'll still be the same strategies for some races (lots of management + 2 stops like the last race) and on traditionally 1-stop races, it won't change much either, fastest cars will still head off to the distance and manage their pace to save their machinery.
It won't change the order but it will be faster and more physical for the drivers which in turn could lead to more mistakes as they are closer to the cars limits.e30ernest wrote: ↑19 Aug 2020, 12:00I don't think that changes much though? It'll still be the same strategies for some races (lots of management + 2 stops like the last race) and on traditionally 1-stop races, it won't change much either, fastest cars will still head off to the distance and manage their pace to save their machinery.
I think you are seriously underestimating the level of thought that have gone in to these tires and the posters who have voiced their opinion in favor of them.Moore77 wrote: ↑19 Aug 2020, 09:46Many people think, having fast degrading tires is good as it allows for more pit stops and a lot of strategies at play. The one think people forget is, the more fragile the tires they bring, the more management drivers would do, making slower races. Every driver would want to extend the stints and hence, goes slower.