McL-H wrote:SmallSoldier wrote: ↑19 Mar 2021, 16:22
Bill wrote:the only reason people belief Mercedes would be quickest car first race is because they got burned in 2019 when they thought ferrari will lead the field.Deep down people would rather vote Redbull.These year team pretty much use cars from last year so Rbr ended the season no1 they will carry that throughout and by adopting merc novel rear suspension they have found more performance merc on the other hand does not have any new innovation these time around
The only reason people belief Mercedes will be quickest is because of their track record, they have been the best team for 7 years in a row, 3 regulation changes and a pandemic... For them to finally forget how to build a car is silly... Yes, there are changes to the floor this year, but it isn’t a complete new set of regulations (like in 2022).
Red Bull won the last race of the season, arguably because Mercedes detuned their engines and already had the WCC and WDC won by then, not considering the fact that they stopped developing the 2021 car earlier than anyone else.
Finally, we have only had 3 days of testing, where Red Bull has showed great performance and Mercedes a few issues, but nothing to indicate that Mercedes won’t be able to overcome the “apparent” rear instability and take their dominance position once again... Not that much different than Red Bull also having rear instability during Winter Testing of 2020 and got on top of it during the season.
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Past results are no predictor for the future. People at these teams come and go. Rules have changed. Margins of error increase when teams keep trying to find more and more pace from an already quick car, and it is a thin line between getting it right and getting it wrong. Mercedes is not immune to getting it wrong. In fact, the team showed some clear signs of slackness at the end of last year at Bahrain and Abu Dhabi.
I am not saying Mercedes can’t fix their issues. But I find it odd to say that they will, just because of their dominance in the past 7 years. That dominance can be gone (and more than gone) in a heartbeat. The past 7 years won’t help them much from that point on.
I would argue that past results do influence the future... What Mercedes has learned and implemented during those 7 years to be ahead of the competition wouldn’t have disappeared and with cars that are an evolution of the ones in previous years (and not a blank slate or starting from scratch as in 2022) they will be able to apply those learnings to this year’s car.
I agree that it gets harder to make an already fast car even faster, but it’s also true that they had a base car that was already very capable and that hasn’t changed that much... They still have one of the best (if not the best) engine in the grid, they have a chassis that is also one of the strongest (if not the strongest) in the grid and the changes for this season are around the aero performance driven by the changes to the floor, therefore while other teams have to not only focus on “recovering” the loss of downforce, they need to find an extra to cut the gap to Mercedes... That’s their advantage.
Now, I’m not saying that Mercedes can’t get it wrong, but from a probability perspective is way more probable that they will continue to have their leadership position than they will go backwards in the grid... So far, all the information we have is from 3 days of Testing were data is very hard to analyze, we all know the tricks and games the team’s play, so we are only basing this Pecking Order predictions on more gut feeling than hard data.
Mercedes showed up to testing with a car that showed signs of rear instability (and even with that, their pace wasn’t that off, specially on the long runs)... That in itself is already encouraging for the current champions... It is not much different than other Winter Testing were Mercedes wasn’t considered to be leader until racing actually started.
You mentioned people coming and going, we can’t forget that when Mercedes was developing this season’s car the budget cap wasn’t yet in place, therefore they still were leading the grid in terms of budget / resources... Which in addition to having the most time of probably any team developing their 2021 car, gives them on paper the highest probability to continue their dominance this year.
Could they have got it very wrong? Yes... Could Red Bull be faster this season? Yes... Could we say that based on testing? I’m afraid not.
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