I like Ferrari's strategy of firing Sainz, who is their better driver, in favor of Leclerc who is inferior and probably costs more.
I dream of one day being able to understand this team's magnificent decisions.
There is zero objective evidence that Sainz is a superior driver to Leclerc, or that Leclerc is inferior. It’s purely a subjective opinion of yours that shouldn’t be mistaken as fact. You’re entitled to an opinion but your opinion is not entitled to be true.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:34I like Ferrari's strategy of firing Sainz, who is their better driver, in favor of Leclerc who is inferior and probably costs more.
I dream of one day being able to understand this team's magnificent decisions.
Spot on.catent wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:37There is zero objective evidence that Sainz is a superior driver to Leclerc, or that Leclerc is inferior. It’s purely a subjective opinion of yours that shouldn’t be mistaken as fact. You’re entitled to an opinion but your opinion is not entitled to be true.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:34I like Ferrari's strategy of firing Sainz, who is their better driver, in favor of Leclerc who is inferior and probably costs more.
I dream of one day being able to understand this team's magnificent decisions.
One race weekend does not define a driver. By essentially any empirical measure, Leclerc has been the superior driver over the past 2-3+ seasons, based on qualifying, races, and net points (especially when adjusting for mechanicals, strategy decisions, etc).
And that’s to take absolutely nothing from Sainz, who is a tremendous driver in his own right.
And people are surprised why a certain very rabid fanbase is disliked in Ferrari threads.catent wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:37There is zero objective evidence that Sainz is a superior driver to Leclerc, or that Leclerc is inferior. It’s purely a subjective opinion of yours that shouldn’t be mistaken as fact. You’re entitled to an opinion but your opinion is not entitled to be true.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:34I like Ferrari's strategy of firing Sainz, who is their better driver, in favor of Leclerc who is inferior and probably costs more.
I dream of one day being able to understand this team's magnificent decisions.
One race weekend does not define a driver. By essentially any empirical measure, Leclerc has been the superior driver over the past 2-3+ seasons, based on qualifying, races, and net points (especially when adjusting for mechanicals, strategy decisions, etc).
And that’s to take absolutely nothing from Sainz, who is a tremendous driver in his own right.
In the middle stint, Charles pushed too hard too early for the undercut and destroyed the tyres, also stint after VSC when he was stuck behind Carlos and the team told him to hold position(fairly I may add) his tyres went off bc of the dirty air. Third stint, he was able to ease them in and was decently quicker than Sainz, roughly matched Lando. First stint is not comparable imo, here McLaren and Ferrari were quite evenly matched on pure pace, although I think in clean air our deg was a lot better, hence why Sainz was able to stay on the mediums and gap Lando.Xyz22 wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 15:29I don't think so. Maybe in the last stint.SoulPancake13 wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 15:18I think the dirty air now is just horrible, Charles in clean air with proper warm up was faster than Sainz today.
In no way has Sainz proved he can be no.1 with Leclerc as a teammate. :/PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:37lovely race by my future team! I wish FIA allowed three car teams to be honest. Carlos' performance today was amazing. Really doesn't deserve to be severed when it's not on a performance basis, and worse he's also proving he can legitimately be number 1.
That how it goes at Ferrari, if Leclerc is not beating his teammate every week most washed up driver on the gridSeanspeed wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 17:47In no way has Sainz proved he can be no.1 with Leclerc as a teammate. :/PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:37lovely race by my future team! I wish FIA allowed three car teams to be honest. Carlos' performance today was amazing. Really doesn't deserve to be severed when it's not on a performance basis, and worse he's also proving he can legitimately be number 1.
So many people get carried away with the most extreme recency bias. lol
Anyways, great day. A shame we couldn't have seen the direct pace against Max, but hey. And also fantastic to see amazing execution. Little things weren't perfect, but overall one of the best weekends for the team in a long time, operations-wise.
You're right.catent wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:37There is zero objective evidence that Sainz is a superior driver to Leclerc, or that Leclerc is inferior. It’s purely a subjective opinion of yours that shouldn’t be mistaken as fact. You’re entitled to an opinion but your opinion is not entitled to be true.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:34I like Ferrari's strategy of firing Sainz, who is their better driver, in favor of Leclerc who is inferior and probably costs more.
I dream of one day being able to understand this team's magnificent decisions.
One race weekend does not define a driver. By essentially any empirical measure, Leclerc has been the superior driver over the past 2-3+ seasons, based on qualifying, races, and net points (especially when adjusting for mechanicals, strategy decisions, etc).
And that’s to take absolutely nothing from Sainz, who is a tremendous driver in his own right.
If Red Bull doesn't hire Sainz, then everyone on that team should be fired. It's the perfect outcome for everyone.scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 18:34That how it goes at Ferrari, if Leclerc is not beating his teammate every week most washed up driver on the gridSeanspeed wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 17:47In no way has Sainz proved he can be no.1 with Leclerc as a teammate. :/PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:37lovely race by my future team! I wish FIA allowed three car teams to be honest. Carlos' performance today was amazing. Really doesn't deserve to be severed when it's not on a performance basis, and worse he's also proving he can legitimately be number 1.
So many people get carried away with the most extreme recency bias. lol
Anyways, great day. A shame we couldn't have seen the direct pace against Max, but hey. And also fantastic to see amazing execution. Little things weren't perfect, but overall one of the best weekends for the team in a long time, operations-wise.
RH2H 2023 11-5 where both drivers finished
QH2H 2023 14-6 when both driver made it to Q2 or higher
On the other hand Sainz deserves a top seat, it will be criminal not to have a seat in a top 4 team in my opinion, with at least equeal status. If it were on recent performance alone I'd have him over Hamilton any day of the week. But I'm reasonable enough to understand that deal is bigger than just on track performance.
Wherever he goes, I wish him the best. I wish his time at Ferrari was not so overshadowed by the off-track politics, at least for me personally, because he is a geniune guy.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 18:47If Red Bull doesn't hire Sainz, then everyone on that team should be fired. It's the perfect outcome for everyone.scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 18:34That how it goes at Ferrari, if Leclerc is not beating his teammate every week most washed up driver on the gridSeanspeed wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 17:47
In no way has Sainz proved he can be no.1 with Leclerc as a teammate. :/
So many people get carried away with the most extreme recency bias. lol
Anyways, great day. A shame we couldn't have seen the direct pace against Max, but hey. And also fantastic to see amazing execution. Little things weren't perfect, but overall one of the best weekends for the team in a long time, operations-wise.
RH2H 2023 11-5 where both drivers finished
QH2H 2023 14-6 when both driver made it to Q2 or higher
On the other hand Sainz deserves a top seat, it will be criminal not to have a seat in a top 4 team in my opinion, with at least equeal status. If it were on recent performance alone I'd have him over Hamilton any day of the week. But I'm reasonable enough to understand that deal is bigger than just on track performance.
I guess it's right about time to fire everyone at Scuderia Ferrari.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 18:47If Red Bull doesn't hire Sainz, then everyone on that team should be fired. It's the perfect outcome for everyone.