1. RBR
2. Ferrari
3-4. Mercedes/Aston Martin (balance of power will change drastically from track to track)
5-6-7. Alpine/Alfa Romeo/Haas (see above)
8. McLaren somewhere in no man's land
9. Williams
10. Alpha Tauri
Disagree that the others don't matter - especially when it comes to pecking order predictions. The top 3 is (Relatively) easy - the rest is the more challenging part of the prediction (and with that, the more 'fun' to see who gets it right or wrong).
Slightly revising my predictions now testing is over,
I agree wholeheartedly with your revision in the pecking order and I am also very curious to see how Alpine go in the race, I liked their confidence in not dropping fuel or running softer tyres in testing.
Mr5in1 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2023, 16:34I agree wholeheartedly with your revision in the pecking order and I am also very curious to see how Alpine go in the race, I liked their confidence in not dropping fuel or running softer tyres in testing.
The only other one I'm unsure of is McLaren I really don't think they are slowest but I'm not sure where they are in the mid pack so difficult to guess
Yes, the bottom is much harder to guess but, because I don´t have time to analyse things, I´ll just stick with the front runners this time around. The best I could say is that I have an impression that Mclaren and Alpine have built quite underwhelming cars and Williams will be a bit less horrible. AM seems to remain a strong midfielder and Haas less so.
I agree with almost everything you wrote, except maybe only a littlebit for the early shift by almost everyone.