Any idea where he said that?
He says it more or less here:
It tracks with Horners "later into the season" remark from today. My guess is that it will arrive at Silverstone. They brought upgrades to Silverstone last year.The fact that the Red Bull floor cannot simply be copied and then put under another Formula 1 car is not the only reason why Verstappen is not worried. "In the end, I don't think it matters very much. This is our floor now, but in a few races we will have a new floor again. That one will be completely different again. It won't matter that much," said the championship leader.
https://www.racefans.net/2023/06/04/why ... as-rivals/After the race team principal Christian Horner said the decision had been “a bit on the conservative side” and arose from concerns over how well the C3 would hold up. “We were concerned that the soft tyre would degrade quite quickly and could put you on the cusp of a three-stop [strategy].
“So we were a little bit more conservative with Max. And with Checo, we felt that it would give him longer range to make better use of the pace of the car and that indeed that played out pretty well for him later in the race.”
They had all the data on Softs from FP2. So it's not like they didn't know how good the Softs was going to be. They either attempted one stop or wanted to go longer on each stint to counter rain if it would arrive.AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 03:13RB discuss the conservative tire strategy in Spain:
https://www.racefans.net/2023/06/04/why ... as-rivals/After the race team principal Christian Horner said the decision had been “a bit on the conservative side” and arose from concerns over how well the C3 would hold up. “We were concerned that the soft tyre would degrade quite quickly and could put you on the cusp of a three-stop [strategy].
“So we were a little bit more conservative with Max. And with Checo, we felt that it would give him longer range to make better use of the pace of the car and that indeed that played out pretty well for him later in the race.”
It is just like in Merc's dominant years. Hamilton was often on the conservative strategy.mendis wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 03:37They had all the data on Softs from FP2. So it's not like they didn't know how good the Softs was going to be. They either attempted one stop or wanted to go longer on each stint to counter rain if it would arrive.AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 03:13RB discuss the conservative tire strategy in Spain:
https://www.racefans.net/2023/06/04/why ... as-rivals/After the race team principal Christian Horner said the decision had been “a bit on the conservative side” and arose from concerns over how well the C3 would hold up. “We were concerned that the soft tyre would degrade quite quickly and could put you on the cusp of a three-stop [strategy].
“So we were a little bit more conservative with Max. And with Checo, we felt that it would give him longer range to make better use of the pace of the car and that indeed that played out pretty well for him later in the race.”
Cassius wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 10:53It is just like in Merc's dominant years. Hamilton was often on the conservative strategy.mendis wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 03:37They had all the data on Softs from FP2. So it's not like they didn't know how good the Softs was going to be. They either attempted one stop or wanted to go longer on each stint to counter rain if it would arrive.AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 03:13RB discuss the conservative tire strategy in Spain:
https://www.racefans.net/2023/06/04/why ... as-rivals/
Max had the speed to be on the safe side.
I think Max was not really happy in his first two stints. Maybe the low temps cought them out. He didn't have enough front end on his mediums and his left front was giving up sooner than during fp2. Also he didn't like the hards: they were sliding and overheating while braking. In hindsight he should have been on the same strategy as Mercedes.
I spent all night trying to convince Horner to stay with us. That cost us a lot of extra millions," Marko said
Adrian Newey has also been in demand for years. The aerodynamics genius has been building race-winning cars for decades and should make Ferrari a championship-winning team. But Italian millions were not enough to win over the British engineer either. "The then Ferrari boss, Luca di Montizemelo, was already cheering in the paddock. But we still managed to change his mind that night," says Marko