Ferrari
Counter arguement is Toyota kept the WEC going so we can have this hypercar class at all and then they got severely BOP'd so someone else can win.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 19:30I'm glad Toyota lost. I have nothing against the brand but the only way they've won so far was by racing by themselves for the overall victory. The first time they face competition, even though everyone else came late to the party, they couldn't win. I don't mind if they win another year against some actual competition, but all their wins so far count for nothing in my mind.
Nah, that's at minimum a mis-representation of the BoP that happened. Toyota was given 13kg more than Ferrari and 5MJ per stint more than Ferrari. They were out qualified by 0.7s and 1.5s respectively, hardly something that can be accounted for by 13kg, during the race Ferrari's pace was often better by a large margin, #50 was even 1s/lap faster than everyone else, #51 was 0.6s/lap faster even with Hartley, again hardly accountable for by 13kg in extra weight.jjn9128 wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 19:50Counter arguement is Toyota kept the WEC going so we can have this hypercar class at all and then they got severely BOP'd so someone else can win.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 19:30I'm glad Toyota lost. I have nothing against the brand but the only way they've won so far was by racing by themselves for the overall victory. The first time they face competition, even though everyone else came late to the party, they couldn't win. I don't mind if they win another year against some actual competition, but all their wins so far count for nothing in my mind.
I understand where you're going at, but I also think you forgot how it was when Toyota joined LMP1 with the TS030 and how that car did against "actual competition".DiogoBrand wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 19:30I'm glad Toyota lost. I have nothing against the brand but the only way they've won so far was by racing by themselves for the overall victory. The first time they face competition, even though everyone else came late to the party, they couldn't win. I don't mind if they win another year against some actual competition, but all their wins so far count for nothing in my mind.
Don't really understand this special sense of entitlement from Toyota and their supporters. In any previous years if all of the top manufacturers had folded in the category it would be abolished outright leaving lower class cars to fight it out for the win. Now Toyota were literally gifted half a decade of unchecked dominance and now finally with new manufacturers arriving they are required to do just a tiny bit more and suddenly they are "angry" and "threaten"? They should wake up and smell the coffee. They might still be the biggest cat on the block in terms of money and resources but at the same time nowhere near the popularity level of Ferrari and Porsche. Also, from what I understand WEC Committee has the discretion to amend BOP as necessary even if it has been set for 4 races or what have you. Carrying 14 extra kg over Ferrari with 4 extra hp and bunch more energy per stint doesn't really sound like that much of a handicap, considering the maturity of their platform and the fact it was initially designed to weigh even more than that.Spoutnik wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 20:51I was at Le Mans and what a race after all these FP session, the tense Hyperpole.
Im glad the #51 cause otherwise I would've lost some money
Key points for me :
- Peugeot : was impressive on raw pace even if both drivers binned it and it started having reliability issue in the morning. It's really impressive the steps they've made. And I have to say this car is quite impressive to see passing through corners, she looks really really low
- Ferrari : AF Corse runned a perfect race. No mistakes from the drivers apart from Guidi last night, I always feel they will win at Le Mans - before the BoP drama - because they had the fastest car by quite a margin since the start of the WEC season. And we saw that in qualy, in race it helps in the traffic, it helped to make the passes the Porsche for example couldn't make at the beginning of the race
Toyota : They TP is quite angry, and they can be angry because in a sense they were let down by the WEC/ACO, despite carrying the category since 2018
The BoP change was logic but "illegal"/or lets say contra legem : the organizers broke their own rule to create racing... it's a debate reminiscent of Abu Dhabi 2021, or Melbourne 2023 in that way Apparently, in private exchange with journalists Toyota threaten of a possible withdrawal from the WEC..
But on the race itself as always with Toyota their drivers are making mistakes under pressure. And I know Hartley couldnt continue/Buemi couldnt have been put in for the last stint but Hirakawa was probably the slowest of the 3, and I feel that was only to put a japanese in the car in case of a victory for them
- Cadillac : For a first time in the fastest category Chip Ganassi did well. Car looked stable and was reliable. The real issue for me, even if the #2 didnt run an absolutely perfect race, is that : can an LMDh really win against an LMH and Im not sure.
- Porsche : Same question. But their car is still unreliable. And it is very difficult to drive, you can see it easily sitting a few minutes on the grandstand, thats what led to many mistakes imo when the Porsche drivers wanted to consistantly do sub 3.29 over a stint. I still don't understand their choice to got for LMDh rather than LMH especially considering their technical background in LMP1
IIRC its him who put it onto the gravel ? Nervertheless he had a great pace
I'm not a Toyota supporter, in fact I hoped for everything but a win - again - from Toyota. But that doesn't mean it has to be taken away from them.Avtandil wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 23:15Don't really understand this special sense of entitlement from Toyota and their supporters. In any previous years if all of the top manufacturers had folded in the category it would be abolished outright leaving lower class cars to fight it out for the win. Now Toyota were literally gifted half a decade of unchecked dominance and now finally with new manufacturers arriving they are required to do just a tiny bit more and suddenly they are "angry" and "threaten"? They should wake up and smell the coffee. They might still be the biggest cat on the block in terms of money and resources but at the same time nowhere near the popularity level of Ferrari and Porsche. Also, from what I understand WEC Committee has the discretion to amend BOP as necessary even if it has been set for 4 races or what have you. Carrying 14 extra kg over Ferrari with 4 extra hp and bunch more energy per stint doesn't really sound like that much of a handicap, considering the maturity of their platform and the fact it was initially designed to weigh even more than that.Spoutnik wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 20:51I was at Le Mans and what a race after all these FP session, the tense Hyperpole.
Im glad the #51 cause otherwise I would've lost some money
Key points for me :
- Peugeot : was impressive on raw pace even if both drivers binned it and it started having reliability issue in the morning. It's really impressive the steps they've made. And I have to say this car is quite impressive to see passing through corners, she looks really really low
- Ferrari : AF Corse runned a perfect race. No mistakes from the drivers apart from Guidi last night, I always feel they will win at Le Mans - before the BoP drama - because they had the fastest car by quite a margin since the start of the WEC season. And we saw that in qualy, in race it helps in the traffic, it helped to make the passes the Porsche for example couldn't make at the beginning of the race
Toyota : They TP is quite angry, and they can be angry because in a sense they were let down by the WEC/ACO, despite carrying the category since 2018
The BoP change was logic but "illegal"/or lets say contra legem : the organizers broke their own rule to create racing... it's a debate reminiscent of Abu Dhabi 2021, or Melbourne 2023 in that way Apparently, in private exchange with journalists Toyota threaten of a possible withdrawal from the WEC..
But on the race itself as always with Toyota their drivers are making mistakes under pressure. And I know Hartley couldnt continue/Buemi couldnt have been put in for the last stint but Hirakawa was probably the slowest of the 3, and I feel that was only to put a japanese in the car in case of a victory for them
- Cadillac : For a first time in the fastest category Chip Ganassi did well. Car looked stable and was reliable. The real issue for me, even if the #2 didnt run an absolutely perfect race, is that : can an LMDh really win against an LMH and Im not sure.
- Porsche : Same question. But their car is still unreliable. And it is very difficult to drive, you can see it easily sitting a few minutes on the grandstand, thats what led to many mistakes imo when the Porsche drivers wanted to consistantly do sub 3.29 over a stint. I still don't understand their choice to got for LMDh rather than LMH especially considering their technical background in LMP1
you are not gifted anything in motorsport you have to field a car ,deploy big budget ,hire people and assume all risk and reward that come with racing .toyota won all champ on merit last year they beat alpine a big manufacture.same with audi they won all there champ without big competition.Bop is a gift to ferrari it is about handycapping the faster car and helping the slower ones its shameful.it is the european who are ruining motorsport because they think they are entitled to success eg common ecu in moto gp because they could not keep up with the japanese.the next gen pu in f1 have removed everything that make today pu efficient just so to appease the like of porsche and audi.Avtandil wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 23:15Don't really understand this special sense of entitlement from Toyota and their supporters. In any previous years if all of the top manufacturers had folded in the category it would be abolished outright leaving lower class cars to fight it out for the win. Now Toyota were literally gifted half a decade of unchecked dominance and now finally with new manufacturers arriving they are required to do just a tiny bit more and suddenly they are "angry" and "threaten"? They should wake up and smell the coffee. They might still be the biggest cat on the block in terms of money and resources but at the same time nowhere near the popularity level of Ferrari and Porsche. Also, from what I understand WEC Committee has the discretion to amend BOP as necessary even if it has been set for 4 races or what have you. Carrying 14 extra kg over Ferrari with 4 extra hp and bunch more energy per stint doesn't really sound like that much of a handicap, considering the maturity of their platform and the fact it was initially designed to weigh even more than that.Spoutnik wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023, 20:51I was at Le Mans and what a race after all these FP session, the tense Hyperpole.
Im glad the #51 cause otherwise I would've lost some money
Key points for me :
- Peugeot : was impressive on raw pace even if both drivers binned it and it started having reliability issue in the morning. It's really impressive the steps they've made. And I have to say this car is quite impressive to see passing through corners, she looks really really low
- Ferrari : AF Corse runned a perfect race. No mistakes from the drivers apart from Guidi last night, I always feel they will win at Le Mans - before the BoP drama - because they had the fastest car by quite a margin since the start of the WEC season. And we saw that in qualy, in race it helps in the traffic, it helped to make the passes the Porsche for example couldn't make at the beginning of the race
Toyota : They TP is quite angry, and they can be angry because in a sense they were let down by the WEC/ACO, despite carrying the category since 2018
The BoP change was logic but "illegal"/or lets say contra legem : the organizers broke their own rule to create racing... it's a debate reminiscent of Abu Dhabi 2021, or Melbourne 2023 in that way Apparently, in private exchange with journalists Toyota threaten of a possible withdrawal from the WEC..
But on the race itself as always with Toyota their drivers are making mistakes under pressure. And I know Hartley couldnt continue/Buemi couldnt have been put in for the last stint but Hirakawa was probably the slowest of the 3, and I feel that was only to put a japanese in the car in case of a victory for them
- Cadillac : For a first time in the fastest category Chip Ganassi did well. Car looked stable and was reliable. The real issue for me, even if the #2 didnt run an absolutely perfect race, is that : can an LMDh really win against an LMH and Im not sure.
- Porsche : Same question. But their car is still unreliable. And it is very difficult to drive, you can see it easily sitting a few minutes on the grandstand, thats what led to many mistakes imo when the Porsche drivers wanted to consistantly do sub 3.29 over a stint. I still don't understand their choice to got for LMDh rather than LMH especially considering their technical background in LMP1