Absolutely.El Scorchio wrote: ↑06 Oct 2021, 12:11Agree, you'd need a great big slice of luck at the right time, similar to what Verstappen had in Sochi. You can't make up all that time on the front 4-5 cars starting from 20th without a few safety cars, or a red flag or some bizarre weather to do the same thing. Maybe in 2014 when the Mercedes was in a class of it's own, but not in 2021 when it's much more competitive.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑06 Oct 2021, 10:22Sorry but that's just unrealistic. A new PU in the wet isn't that beneficial as you can't use all of the extra performance anyway. And as good as Hamilton is in the wet, Max and others at the front are just as good. He'd need Max, Lando, etc., to have issues to even get on the podium. Something like Max's perfectly timed tyre change to inters at the last race, for example. Otherwise, like Max was, he'll stall around P5-7 at best.
Verstappen got through the positions nicely in the first stint but ate his tyres doing so.If anything he was going backwards until the perfect amount of rain (to make it not a slam dunk for everyone to immediately come in at once) came along at the perfect time to bail him out. (a few laps to go, so some in the points chanced their arm on slicks)
Not to say it wouldn't or couldn't happen, but it's very unlikely for those circumstances to occur.
This is exactly what I as saying in another thread. Some people think this is “crazy” to call it luck even though their opinion is at odds with the drivers in the paddock.
The rumour is 4000km before the engine starts acting up. How many Km on average per GP?/ weekend?
Red bull is going to win this championship, Mercedes can change my mind if they win Turkey and USA