Top 10 Onboards of Australian GP
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiTJoT0 ... e=youtu.be
Driving slower and looking after tyres is a time anyone can make a mistake. you dont need to be on the edge to make a mistake
yes as posted the video and pic of it yesterday in the Ferrari topicNathanOlder wrote: ↑19 Mar 2019, 18:13at the time, I didnt think they did, But its clear from the onbaord that Leclerc and Vettel touched in T2 on Lap 1.
I couldn't agree with you more about Mercedes dominance. Why the rest of the teams are so unprepared is beyond me
I am yet to come across Mercedes fans on the forum here! I know a number of Hamilton fans here, but not a lot of Mercedes fans. Nobody fights to their death, defending Mercedes. No chest thumping or fist pumping, no cheer leading, no such shenanigans like that you find on Ferrari or Red Bull team threads. McLaren is where all the tears are stored. So it should be safe to assume, there isn't an overwhelming happiness displayed for Mercedes' victory or dominance per se.
Misery loves company.GPR -A wrote: ↑19 Mar 2019, 19:24I am yet to come across Mercedes fans on the forum here! I know a number of Hamilton fans here, but not a lot of Mercedes fans. Nobody fights to their death, defending Mercedes. No chest thumping or fist pumping, no cheer leading, no such shenanigans like that you find on Ferrari or Red Bull team threads. McLaren is where all the tears are stored. So it should be safe to assume, there isn't an overwhelming happiness displayed for Mercedes' victory or dominance per se.
Look at some stats.
2019 Ferrari team thread has reached 16 pages.
2019 Mercedes team thread has 18 pages.
2019 Red Bull team thread has already reached 58 pages!
2019 McLaren team thread has already reached 142 pages!!! Mostly disheartened souls there, for a few years now.
2018 Mercedes team thread reached 45 pages.
2018 Ferrari team thread reached 58 pages.
2018 Red Bull team thread reached 67 pages.
2018 McLaren team thread reached 531 pages!!!!!!!!!!!!
One of the (formerly) guilty here. Not on this site though.GPR -A wrote: ↑19 Mar 2019, 19:24I am yet to come across Mercedes fans on the forum here! I know a number of Hamilton fans here, but not a lot of Mercedes fans. Nobody fights to their death, defending Mercedes. No chest thumping or fist pumping, no cheer leading, no such shenanigans like that you find on Ferrari or Red Bull team threads. McLaren is where all the tears are stored. So it should be safe to assume, there isn't an overwhelming happiness displayed for Mercedes' victory or dominance per se.
Look at some stats.
2019 Ferrari team thread has reached 16 pages.
2019 Mercedes team thread has 18 pages.
2019 Red Bull team thread has already reached 58 pages!
2019 McLaren team thread has already reached 142 pages!!! Mostly disheartened souls there, for a few years now.
2018 Mercedes team thread reached 45 pages.
2018 Ferrari team thread reached 58 pages.
2018 Red Bull team thread reached 67 pages.
2018 McLaren team thread reached 531 pages!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hey, where's Seb's moustache?Godius wrote: ↑19 Mar 2019, 11:09https://kitasumu.com/wp-content/uploads ... 857962.png
source
Williams still hasn't finished :')
Well, you can go on and convince yourself that Leclerc was the quicker driver, but it’s really irrelevant, as on the day it really mattered (Saturday), he wasnt. There really isnt more to talk about. Ferrari made the call and even if they hadnt, i’m not sure if he’d have gotten past Seb if he really wanted to defend his position on this track. We’ll never know for sure either way.NathanOlder wrote: ↑19 Mar 2019, 18:09Driving slower and looking after tyres is a time anyone can make a mistake. you dont need to be on the edge to make a mistake
1) Who chose the strategies is entirely irrelevant to my argument. Nice strawman though and good to know this was the most substantive thing you could find to argue about.
Please explain how my post about one Ferrari employee traversing the race distance in a shorter time than another Ferrari employee is substantially altered by replacing the shorthand of 'Vettel' and 'Leclerc', which I used to clearly refer not only to the relevant drivers but to both their respective cars, engines, various other parts and settings, tyres and the pitstop crew, with 'Inaki Rueda' (and it may have been someone other than Rueda who both developed and selected the strategy, I assume you have proof as to whom played both of those roles)?
Also, I'm not making an argument, I'm stating a fact. Leclerc would have completed the race distance in a shorter time than Vettel if he'd been allowed to pass (barring a catastrophic anomaly that wasn't revealed during the race). It's horrifying that people are unwilling to accept it and are reduced to pedantry and strawmanning to try and alter reality. It's equally incredible that the people who are unwilling to admit that fact, somehow think it's a criticism of Vettel. If it makes the Vettel-fans feel better, I also think, come race day, Bottas was faster than Hamilton (turns out that Sunday is relevant, rare for Albert Park), Verstappen was faster than Gasly and Stroll was faster than Perez (because they were). I guess that makes me a Hamilton / Gasly / Perez hater too. Anyone think Kubica was slower than Russell? Bet they only think that because they hate Poles, right?
That's also demonstrably false. Drivers regularly choose when to pit and what tyres to put on in damp conditions. There are also rare occasions when the team leave the choice of strategy to the driver. Mercedes in Abu Dhabi in 2015, for instance.
The simple point is; drivers do not choose strategy. There are teams of analysts, banks of computers and other external resources dedicated just to permute strategy, both track-side and at the teams home bases.Wynters wrote: ↑20 Mar 2019, 01:211) Who chose the strategies is entirely irrelevant to my argument. Nice strawman though and good to know this was the most substantive thing you could find to argue about.
2) If this is the hill you want to die on, let's see what I said...Please explain how my post about one Ferrari employee traversing the race distance in a shorter time than another Ferrari employee is substantially altered by replacing the shorthand of 'Vettel' and 'Leclerc', which I used to clearly refer not only to the relevant drivers but to both their respective cars, engines, various other parts and settings, tyres and the pitstop crew, with 'Inaki Rueda' (and it may have been someone other than Rueda who both developed and selected the strategy, I assume you have proof as to whom played both of those roles)?
Bear in mind that, if swapping those words doesn't substantially change my point, thenAlso, I'm not making an argument, I'm stating a fact. Leclerc would have completed the race distance in a shorter time than Vettel if he'd been allowed to pass (barring a catastrophic anomaly that wasn't revealed during the race). It's horrifying that people are unwilling to accept it and are reduced to pedantry and strawmanning to try and alter reality. It's equally incredible that the people who are unwilling to admit that fact, somehow think it's a criticism of Vettel. If it makes the Vettel-fans feel better, I also think, come race day, Bottas was faster than Hamilton (turns out that Sunday is relevant, rare for Albert Park), Verstappen was faster than Gasly and Stroll was faster than Perez (because they were). I guess that makes me a Hamilton / Gasly / Perez hater too. Anyone think Kubica was slower than Russell? Bet they only think that because they hate Poles, right?
That's also demonstrably false. Drivers regularly choose when to pit and what tyres to put on in damp conditions. There are also rare occasions when the team leave the choice of strategy to the driver. Mercedes in Abu Dhabi in 2015, for instance.
Well there are 0 points given out on Saturday, so you can hardly call that "when it mattered" Phil.Phil wrote: ↑19 Mar 2019, 23:45Well, you can go on and convince yourself that Leclerc was the quicker driver, but it’s really irrelevant, as on the day it really mattered (Saturday), he wasnt. There really isnt more to talk about. Ferrari made the call and even if they hadnt, i’m not sure if he’d have gotten past Seb if he really wanted to defend his position on this track. We’ll never know for sure either way.NathanOlder wrote: ↑19 Mar 2019, 18:09Driving slower and looking after tyres is a time anyone can make a mistake. you dont need to be on the edge to make a mistake