The new rear wing would've been the optimal choice regardless, but they didn't want to risk damaging more of them. Given how treacherous the quali and race were, probably the right call.MCLvamos wrote: ↑27 Aug 2023, 22:29Tough race, but a Russell quote from today sticks out "I'd rather have a good car and bad day than the other way round". Alpine can have their moment today. Hopefully, the team learns from this and we can challenge in what looks like similar conditions next weekend.
Also, I think the new wing would have helped in that comeback drive today, especially when Lando was stuck behind Tsunoda. I suspected the old draggier wing may have caused us problems if any racy situations arised.
I think next week the team will bring a cutout wing with the new philosophy or perhaps even a low DF special with Vegas also in mind. Hopefully, we can bounce back strong and keep the momentum up! My goal for the team is 5 podiums this year, don't think that's too unrealistic.
The old spec rear wing was enough to get Lando and Oscar P2/P3 on the grid if both did decent laps. Lando did an alright lap but oscar didn't and that was that. You don't need the straight-line speed for overtaking if you're expecting to start very high up the grid really (p2-p5). It was impossible to forecast the situation that has both Oscar and Lando out of the top 10 on lap 5 stuck behind with the draggier RW. Plus that new wing is more efficient but also produces less df so in the wetter conditions might've struggled a bit more which was when the car seemed already a bit weaker compared to its rivals like Merc