Both crashes today and the crash from Leclerc yesterday seemed like driver errors to me. Compare the line Sainz took and how far he went over the curb to other drivers. Same error twice...
Leclerc did great today.
I feel it's the other way around... Leclerc has some spectacular results but also has messed up when great opportunities where their. Sainz is less spectacular but more consistent. He made the same mistake twice in qualifying which to me is very uncharacteristic for Sainz.Andres125sx wrote: ↑05 Dec 2021, 12:27Congratulations to Charles, 4th is impressive. And a bit dissapointed with Carlos. I think this qualifying showed biggest weakness from Carlos, he makes some mistakes when it matters while Charles is the opposite, he looks tame in FP and Q1, but when it matters he (almost) always nail it.
Hopefully in the race Carlos will show his biggest strenght too, doing a solid race and collecting some points, but I´m not too optimistic as this track is going to be a PITA to overtake
From this article:Carlos Sainz wrote:“It is something to analyse, something to look into what I could have done differently as it’s a snap of oversteer that I was not expecting. This corner has been flat for me for the whole of qualifying, and for some reason in that lap, I lost the rear, but we’ll look at it and come back from it.”
Look back at both Sainz' laps and watch how far he goes over the curb. Then go watch other drivers qualifying laps. It's impossible for everyone to drive the curb like he did. Damage or not, the line he wanted to take was impossible as far as I can judge...Andres125sx wrote: ↑05 Dec 2021, 13:03Agree about Sainz consistency, but more in race than qualifying. Qualifying is not his biggest strenght. I´m not saying he´s weak in Q, but not his strongest point either
To be fair, second mistake might be caused by the damaged endplate, he said the car was undrivable, but OTOH he was being very fast up to that point so not sure how damaged was the car...
Agreed. I thought that track would be hard for Ferrari engines compared to Mercedes-McLaren, but both cars in points. Also for 2022 they need good tyre management, if driver can stay longer he can win by pitting under red flags-SC. It seems Ferrari did more 18" tyre tests than any other team so probably that gathered info can help them.
https://the-race.com/formula-1/todt-in- ... residency/Ferrari is in discussions with outgoing FIA president Jean Todt for a return to the Formula 1 team in an advisory role.
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Corriere Della Sera reports that Todt first spoke to Ferrari president John Elkann about a possible consulting role at this year’s Le Mans 24 Hours.
In the role, Todt would support Mattia Binotto, who is Ferrari’s team principal and managing director after being promoted from chief technical officer in 2019.
It would be similar in theory to the influence Niki Lauda had at Mercedes, where the three-time world champion was non-executive chairman until his death two years ago.
The Ferraris have some decent speed, it seems. Even the Alfas posted some eye opening speeds this past weekend. It seems to me that the Ferrari PU is not as bad as we've thought. Looks like the issues lie with the SF21 itself, not the PU. With the new ES, aside from better energy recovery, Ferrari (The Alfas or the Haas' haven't gotten the new hybrid elements) have been able to run more downforce and tweak a few things so it helps with overall performance, but looks like the issues are more in the aero, chassis, tyre management, etc. Am I missing something, or are we really not that far behind in the PU?