But the car was positioned at a spot where literally no car would crash into, and it was just 8 metres away from where they had to roll the car to. I think the team assumed there wouldn’t be a VSC because of that, or that there would be little chance of a VSC anyway.CjC wrote: ↑06 Dec 2020, 21:46It’ll need to be analysed by one of us but surely they should have gambled to pit him just before the VSC came into operation.
Every time you see a car on the side of the road out of the race it’s going to be a VSC or full safety car 99% of the time.
Again this needs looking at but from my quick observations during the race, on the driver tracker it looked like Sainz was half way down the pit straight then the VSC was deployed
All valid points but we live in a world where accountability is everything so minimising the marshals risk to danger is paramount- especially after Grosjeans crash last weekend.McL-H wrote: ↑06 Dec 2020, 21:50But the car was positioned at a spot where literally no car would crash into, and it was just 8 metres away from where they had to roll the car to. I think the team assumed there wouldn’t be a VSC because of that, or that there would be little chance of a VSC anyway.CjC wrote: ↑06 Dec 2020, 21:46It’ll need to be analysed by one of us but surely they should have gambled to pit him just before the VSC came into operation.
Every time you see a car on the side of the road out of the race it’s going to be a VSC or full safety car 99% of the time.
Again this needs looking at but from my quick observations during the race, on the driver tracker it looked like Sainz was half way down the pit straight then the VSC was deployed
Scratch this one off man. Because of corona we had a season that is probably way way different than a normal one would have been. The rules for next year certainly aren't in McLaren's favor too so there's that as well. It's all in for 2022 right now. Hopefully they improve for 2021, but it is going to be tough unfortunately with how restricted they are from the regulations.
How they don't know? The graphic was showing VSC ending way earlier than Sainz was approaching the pit lane. They could easily change their decision. The whole point of pitting in that moment had gone since they got green before he entered.
They called him in, it's possible to reverse the call but depends on how much time they had to notice it and react.
Ye, I agree that he would stop at some point, what I didn't get was the timing since the VSC ended. Definitely we had terrible luck, that's for sure.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑06 Dec 2020, 23:20They called him in, it's possible to reverse the call but depends on how much time they had to notice it and react.
On the other hand, what is your reasoning to keep him out. He was on a two stop strategy, he would have pitted soon regardless of VSC. In fact some two stoppers started pitting before the VSC. Only way it would be beneficial to stay out is if they gambled that there would be a new VSC or SC before he had to pit. It's possible, but he'd open himself up to a big undercut by all of those that pitted under VSC.
Unlucky situation. Nothing to hold against the team. Even with this, if Mercedes didn't mess up their pitstops, Sainz would be right behind the one stoppers with fresher tires at the SC restart. What hurt McLaren is the fact that not only 2 SCs played into one stop strategy, but that Mercedes errors put them between Sainz and his competitors with Bottas on old tyres effectively acting as a roadblock for Sainz.
Yeah was just about to comment that. Apparently the bad luck stretches beyond our initial assumptionDipesh1995 wrote: ↑06 Dec 2020, 23:55Lando had an issue with car according to Seidl.
https://www.mclaren.com/racing/2020/sak ... rand-prix/