For me it has all the hallmarks of 2007. Different dynamic, but fastest car doesn't win because 2 drivers take points off of each other allowing a slower car to win the WDC.
Nice summary.mwillems wrote: ↑03 Sep 2024, 07:38It's a lunge when you don't like the move, and last of the late breakers when you do.
Oscar was alongside before the corner so cannot really be classed as a lunge unless you are sore. I know several don't like that he did it, but it was a brilliant overtake who's opportunity was gifted to him by another mistake from Lando.
If that was anyone else getting past Lando then the focus would be absolutely on his choking and not on the driver politics.
It's hard to find the exact quote where Piastri said it, but to me his interviews after the race sounded like he was aware of Lando stopping for a second time and that he was worried about him - not Leclerc (thinking everyone will two stop). Piastri also was doing same laptimes as Leclerc with 5 second buffer. His only threat of an undercut (if he stops again) was Norris. I feel that drivers often times tell what they want to happen. If Piastri wanted to stay out he would have said that the tires are bad but can go to the end.
Exactly. The gap was stable and Piastri was not under threat of another car undercutting him. So McLaren as a team has nothing to lose if Piastri stays out until his tires fall off. Only downside would be if you are absolutely certain that Piastri pitting early will get you 1-2 which I don't think anyone realistic could be sure of. They even had Norris out on track and could see laptimes he can do. It's not rocket science to extrapolate that and see that it is very hard to catch Leclerc unless his tires fall off completely.Tvetovnato wrote: ↑02 Sep 2024, 22:37With the gap Oscar had right before he made his final stop, it has to be considered a strategy error. If Leclerc was 1,5 behind or catching him at 0,5 a lap or so, then it would make sense from what they could see at that point in time. But he had a stable gap of over 5 seconds. Waiting it out a few more laps was the right strategy.
You are right but its common sense, after that move, Norris was third in the dirty air of Leclerc. This is the 1st problem, if the 2 MCLarens were 1st and 2nd they could had dictate the pace and the 2nd driver normally could control the distance from the 1st to be tyre happy. This wasn't possible for Norris behind Leclerc and pushed to stay behind and try to pass. The end result was that he didnt saved his tyres and this changed the overall team decisions. Also there was a huge 2nd mistake to pit Norris when he was ready to pass Leclerc. This error is also crucial because after that Leclerc could had the problem of dirty air and tyres overheating. Leclerc maybe would had pitted then to undercut Norris but his tyres will had more laps if the scenario for 1 pitstop was in the table for them but maybe the decision would had been different so early.damo46 wrote: ↑03 Sep 2024, 09:15Nice summary.mwillems wrote: ↑03 Sep 2024, 07:38It's a lunge when you don't like the move, and last of the late breakers when you do.
Oscar was alongside before the corner so cannot really be classed as a lunge unless you are sore. I know several don't like that he did it, but it was a brilliant overtake who's opportunity was gifted to him by another mistake from Lando.
If that was anyone else getting past Lando then the focus would be absolutely on his choking and not on the driver politics.
People sitting on there bums at home saying McLaren would have had a 1,2 finish if it wasn't for Oscar. I'm sorry but how do you know this? Did you see it happen somewhere in another dimension?
Ferrari won this by outsmarting McLaren, not because Oscar drove slow.
An article that basically blames everyone except Oscar. How convienent.mwillems wrote: ↑03 Sep 2024, 10:27A nice summary that echos my sentiments almost in entirety.
• Overtake had no negative bearing on the race outcome
• Having the faster Mclaren as the lead car improved the chances of a Mclaren win
• Strategy won against the faster cars
• Norris lost himself the race at T2
• 1-2 Would have been locked down if Norris was told not to race Piastri when it was clear early on he didn’t have the pace, he was not going to get Piastri and killed his tyres in vanity
If it was the other way round, Oscar for sure would have been told to manage his tyres and the car behind. Norris was allowed to kill his and McLaren's race to chase a ghost.
https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/did- ... a-verdict/
It doesn't blame Oscar because there is no blame, he fought within the rules he was given, as the team and Lando have said. The full quotes from Lando makes clear that he thinks Oscar did nothing wrong and raced fairly and within the rules given by the team.E8404424 wrote: ↑03 Sep 2024, 11:26An article that basically blames everyone except Oscar. How convienent.mwillems wrote: ↑03 Sep 2024, 10:27A nice summary that echos my sentiments almost in entirety.
• Overtake had no negative bearing on the race outcome
• Having the faster Mclaren as the lead car improved the chances of a Mclaren win
• Strategy won against the faster cars
• Norris lost himself the race at T2
• 1-2 Would have been locked down if Norris was told not to race Piastri when it was clear early on he didn’t have the pace, he was not going to get Piastri and killed his tyres in vanity
If it was the other way round, Oscar for sure would have been told to manage his tyres and the car behind. Norris was allowed to kill his and McLaren's race to chase a ghost.
https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/did- ... a-verdict/
So basically Oscar didn't win because those behind him made him ruin his tyres, and where have we seen that before, but isn't that part of racing ? .. Imagine having to deal with the pressure of other cars, including your team mate after you have passed him, daring to try to catch and pass you in a Grand Prix. The very thought. You know Webber should have that in his contract, Lando cannot race Oscar in case it makes Oscars tyres go all hurty.
Lando isn't responsible for how Oscars car is driven. Oscar is. Oscar almost took both cars out himself on lap one just to prove a point, he was clearly faster, he would have passed Lando anyway. No need for risk there. It was a great move, no doubt about that, but it let LeClerc through into second. How did that help either of them ?? .. Lando in second would have helped Oscar a lot more than Charles being there if he did nothing else but hold him up for a few seconds, that would have made all the difference at the end. What's the excuse for Oscar in Zandvoort then and his inability to match his team mate ??
The hype around Oscar is baffling. He is getting soundly beaten by his team mate on everything but apparently because he is ahead on lap one most of the time it just makes him better. It's the last lap that counts. On race finishes he is 10-6 down to Lando so maybe he should think about where he finishes a bit more. He's in his second season but cannot get close to even matching his team mate, let alone beating him. In his second year Lando and Carlos were 97-105 on points, 9-8 on both qualifying and race finishes and they had a podium each. Oscar is 14-2 down in qualifying, 10-6 in races, 10-5 in podiums, 4-0 in poles and 2-1 in race wins. And he had to be let through for that one. If he is going to pull a Lando in his second season he needs to start matching the hype.
That "potential" everyone seems to say he has needs to turn up next season because Lando isn't getting any slower.
You left out part where they say that Piastri pitted second time to cover of Norris second pitstop (stupid idea as they are teammates).mwillems wrote: ↑03 Sep 2024, 10:27A nice summary that echos my sentiments almost in entirety.
• Overtake had no negative bearing on the race outcome
• Having the faster Mclaren as the lead car improved the chances of a Mclaren win
• Strategy won against the faster cars
• Norris lost himself the race at T2
• 1-2 Would have been locked down if Norris was told not to race Piastri when it was clear early on he didn’t have the pace, he was not going to get Piastri and killed his tyres in vanity
If it was the other way round, Oscar for sure would have been told to manage his tyres and the car behind. Norris was allowed to kill his and McLaren's race to chase a ghost.
https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/did- ... a-verdict/