Another chap here who grew up in the 80's (born in 75) - I totally agree, the internet echo chamber created by FaceHugger and amplified by Murdoch's global propaganda machine has really polarised the heck out of society.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 17:27I agree with you 100%mwillems wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 16:44<introspective reply>SmallSoldier wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 16:33
That’s the tragedy of been a public figure… Your actions are judged and overanalyzed and it’s easy to always find fault on someone if that is what one is looking for.
What impresses me the most is how these kids handle the amount of scrutiny, criticism and pressure that comes with the job “off the track”… At 21, I know I would have handle all of it differently (not good) and even at twice that age, I would still probably struggle to keep my composure… That in itself is impressive (and I’m not talking only about Lando is what most young drivers deal with, but F1 is probably the biggest platform of them all).
As always there are two camps, and the upset camp tends to be very loud. You're my age small soldier, so you now well that we have gone through something comparable to the industrial revolution with the internet.
Sadly, it's at a very immature stage and the internet is the worst thing in the world for polarisation, and is a prime reason from Trump, Brexit, the rise of right wing feelings and.... everybody believing in their own opinion, simply because the internet likes to tell us what we want to hear. Google and Facebook are coded to do as much so really we are all stuffed on that front.
As always, this internet culture has informed us on how to behave in real life. At least until someone punches us in the face for being so obnoxious and we realise the internet is not real and that that kind of behaviour is neither helpful nor grown up.
And it does all come down to that ability to not to get upset and to keep a balanced view. A rare commodity indeed.
</introspective reply>
I don’t think it’s as complicated as you’ve made it out to be. I’m inclined to believe these qualities improve with experience. Lando, though in his 3rd season ls till lacks experience in certain scenarios. This was a first for him, fighting for a win in changeable conditions. It was probably a first time for other members of the team as well. I don’t see it as weakness, just inexperience.AeroDynamic wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 14:48I remember watching the sky feature or Carlos had Lando, and another one where it was Lando and Johnny I think? And it was a small detail that stood out to me about Norris: he’s not very good at multitasking while driving. Not saying most drivers are good at that, but he seemed to make a big deal about the fact that he couldn’t focus on driving on the limit while being interviewed and talking.
That weakness was exposed here. His communication while focused, especially under pressure, is not very effective. But it was hardly mitigated by McLaren’s communication over the radio, they weren’t assertive with any advice, they sounded like they were nearly panicking when they were leaning on Lando about what to do. But then that goes back to whoever is running their weather data, either the weather people weren’t as confident and assertive about what they were interpreting, or McLaren struggled to take that advice because it’s so difficult to give up the lead in a marginal call.
mwillems wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 16:44<introspective reply>SmallSoldier wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 16:33That’s the tragedy of been a public figure… Your actions are judged and overanalyzed and it’s easy to always find fault on someone if that is what one is looking for.billamend wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 15:44
Yeah, I was thinking recently about that. In the past Lando was accused of being too careful, not being aggressive enough. But when he is, people --- on him for taking risks and taking a stance.
Glad to read that acknowledgement from you. I agree, I rather him loose like this than playing it safe, at least until they are not fighting for a championship. It builds character.
What impresses me the most is how these kids handle the amount of scrutiny, criticism and pressure that comes with the job “off the track”… At 21, I know I would have handle all of it differently (not good) and even at twice that age, I would still probably struggle to keep my composure… That in itself is impressive (and I’m not talking only about Lando is what most young drivers deal with, but F1 is probably the biggest platform of them all).
As always there are two camps, and the upset camp tends to be very loud. You're my age small soldier, so you now well that we have gone through something comparable to the industrial revolution with the internet.
Sadly, it's at a very immature stage and the internet is the worst thing in the world for polarisation, and is a prime reason from Trump, Brexit, the rise of right wing feelings and.... everybody believing in their own opinion, simply because the internet likes to tell us what we want to hear. Google and Facebook are coded to do as much so really we are all stuffed on that front.
As always, this internet culture has informed us on how to behave in real life. At least until someone punches us in the face for being so obnoxious and we realise the internet is not real and that that kind of behaviour is neither helpful nor grown up.
And it does all come down to that ability to not to get upset and to keep a balanced view. A rare commodity indeed.
</introspective reply>
Isn't that half the battle? When you know how it works in practice, you can take this into account in your work, various little things and nuances can ultimately play a key role. I really hope that Ivan spent a year in America for a reason.
A few months ago, people were wondering if Mclaren SP was cheating because their setup was allowing them to be super fast. Apparently they spent a lot of effort to setup suspension to optimize aero. https://racer.com/2021/06/13/indycar-ri ... ce-2-pace/
Pato O’Ward’s rivals want to know how the driver of the No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevy was able to fire past them in the closing laps and run away to a gaudy 6.7s victory over three tours of Detroit’s Belle Isle street circuit.
It wasn’t just that O’Ward tore through the field—he’s made a name by executing pass after thrilling pass—but rather, how easily he found speed and grip when others in the lead group were forced to treat the brake and throttle pedals with mild contempt on restarts.
If charging from a starting position of P16 to the lead on Lap 68 of 70 wasn’t enough of a statement by O’Ward and the engineering talent contained within AMSP, his ability to disappear over those final three laps and build a staggering margin over Team Penske’s Josef Newgarden is where the Mexican’s adversaries would like to have some answers.
“We need to see why Pato was like four seconds a lap faster on those restarts,” said Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex Palou, who was passed by the 22-year-old in the closing laps and finished P3.
“We could definitely find some stuff to make the car a little better on restarts, but whatever Pato and the [AMSP] guys have is really good, so we need to work up towards that,” said Andretti Autosport’s Colton Herta who, like Newgarden and Palou, had no answer for O’Ward.
Graham Rahal was an early victim of O’Ward’s outrageous speed in Round 2’s closing stanza. Add the Rahal Letterman Lanigan driver to the growing list of curious and envious contenders.
“I don’t know…Pato did a wonderful job, but the [AMSP] cars always on restarts, [are] so fast,” he said after finishing P5. “We just have to figure out how they generate tire temperature when the rest of us seem to not. It is a massive difference, as everybody can see.”
So what’s the answer? Like AMSP would tell them…
Sure it’s experience in part, but you’re being dismissive of that quality about him. It’s not like I’m making it up; he explained it himself. Other drivers like Carlos were comfortable in comparison.Ground Effect wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 10:35I don’t think it’s as complicated as you’ve made it out to be. I’m inclined to believe these qualities improve with experience. Lando, though in his 3rd season ls till lacks experience in certain scenarios. This was a first for him, fighting for a win in changeable conditions. It was probably a first time for other members of the team as well. I don’t see it as weakness, just inexperience.AeroDynamic wrote: ↑30 Sep 2021, 14:48I remember watching the sky feature or Carlos had Lando, and another one where it was Lando and Johnny I think? And it was a small detail that stood out to me about Norris: he’s not very good at multitasking while driving. Not saying most drivers are good at that, but he seemed to make a big deal about the fact that he couldn’t focus on driving on the limit while being interviewed and talking.
That weakness was exposed here. His communication while focused, especially under pressure, is not very effective. But it was hardly mitigated by McLaren’s communication over the radio, they weren’t assertive with any advice, they sounded like they were nearly panicking when they were leaning on Lando about what to do. But then that goes back to whoever is running their weather data, either the weather people weren’t as confident and assertive about what they were interpreting, or McLaren struggled to take that advice because it’s so difficult to give up the lead in a marginal call.
Johnny: why do you stop talking [during interview] ?
Lando: I can’t do both [driving on the limit] I really struggle!
I’m not going to be able to talk [during the lap]
I can’t talk and drive!
*beaches car in the gravel*
He probably did but it's not going to help in setting up the 2022 car. I don't understand why you think it would.
Lando Norris says he worked intensively for two days in McLaren's simulator to understand along with his team the events that led to his painful defeat in the Russian Grand Prix.
I always applaud hard work and reflection, but I think the cause is quite clear. The team didn't interpret the weather well enough and also didn't realise that they only needed to mirror what Max did and they would, as a result, cover off Lewis too.the EDGE wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 21:18Lando Norris says he worked intensively for two days in McLaren's simulator to understand along with his team the events that led to his painful defeat in the Russian Grand Prix.
https://f1i.com/news/420046-norris-unde ... t.html/amp
Not sure what you can do better. Not like you can guarantee that it is gonna rain harder next time. Next reoccurrence they'll pit for inters and the exact might opposite happen, maybe Perez wins....adrianjordan wrote: ↑02 Oct 2021, 00:47I always applaud hard work and reflection, but I think the cause is quite clear. The team didn't interpret the weather well enough and also didn't realise that they only needed to mirror what Max did and they would, as a result, cover off Lewis too.the EDGE wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 21:18Lando Norris says he worked intensively for two days in McLaren's simulator to understand along with his team the events that led to his painful defeat in the Russian Grand Prix.
https://f1i.com/news/420046-norris-unde ... t.html/amp
I mean hell, I was sat at home screaming at them to pit for Inters....and I had less information than they must surely have had!!!
Agreed, but at one point there was a massive gap that Lando could have pitted and come out again in 2nd. It was obvious that Lewis was going to have to cover off Max.diffuser wrote: ↑02 Oct 2021, 05:26Not sure what you can do better. Not like you can guarantee that it is gonna rain harder next time. Next reoccurrence they'll pit for inters and the exact might opposite happen, maybe Perez wins....adrianjordan wrote: ↑02 Oct 2021, 00:47I always applaud hard work and reflection, but I think the cause is quite clear. The team didn't interpret the weather well enough and also didn't realise that they only needed to mirror what Max did and they would, as a result, cover off Lewis too.
I mean hell, I was sat at home screaming at them to pit for Inters....and I had less information than they must surely have had!!!
It wasn't that Merc pitted cause of the rain, they pitted to cover Max. Max had much older tires so he started slide in short time, like Ricciardo.
The biggest influence to what happened to Norris was that Norris was able to go very long in the first stint and had very fresh tires when the rain hit.