mendis wrote: ↑26 Jul 2022, 04:57
Quantum wrote: ↑25 Jul 2022, 10:34
mendis wrote: ↑25 Jul 2022, 03:13
Leclerc started managing his tyres and was lifting too after 7 laps. At that point, it was Max who was faster but he was stuck behind Leclerc and started killing his tyres. If Mercedes has to look at it honestly, then there is full one second per lap gap to Ferrari and Red Bull. If they really want to be in contention, that's the gap to close. Targeting anything less is always going to self deceiving. Problem is, while Mercedes is making progress rapidly, the others are also managing to move forward at a similar rate.
Why are we making excuses for the front guys because Mercedes could keep up?
There are flaws everywhere in that argument.
First, has Leclerc not managed his tyres he'd have dropped off a cliff. That's F1, every driver needs to do this
throughout the race as this is the quickest way to finish the race. This isn't specific to Leclerc.
Second, Verstappen had a choice too. He could follow closely for a couple of laps and if there was a risk to his tyres falling off he should've backed off. That he didn't and had to pit earlier embodies that.
Third, RB's vaunted straightline speed could not get passed Hamilton with Perez.
The W13 is lacking outright pace but comes alive in the race for the very simple reason that a GP is more than outright speed. That's one element. But what if the Mercedes ethos keeps the tyres alive for longer?
It's worth learning more about as if the car gets quicker Mercedes will be able to race harder for longer, even if their outright pace is 0.2/3 less than the cars ahead of them.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merc ... /10343224/
Mercedes believes it still needs to find a "lot of laptime" before it can realistically think about challenging Red Bull and Ferrari for Formula 1 wins.
But although Hamilton came home just 10 seconds adrift of the winning Red Bull after the 53-lap race, Mercedes said it remained realistic about just how big the deficit was to the front.
With Verstappen having been managing his tyres and not under much pressure from behind, Mercedes thinks that France did not offer a proper picture of how far off it is.
Asked by Motorsport.com if he felt the reality remained that Mercedes was around 0.4-0.5 seconds behind the top squads, team principal Toto Wolff said: "I think he [Hamilton] was able to stabilise the gap at five or six seconds in the first stint, but you need to be honest and say when they were racing each other in the second stint, probably Max was just keeping it on the track.
A 1.32 lap (1.38 racing lap) over 5.82km vs the previous race at Austria which was a 4.32km track with 1.08 lap (1.11 race). France is a 26% longer track. In Quali Mercedes were 28% behind.
Russell was 0.630 behind in Austria.
Hamilton was 0.890 behind in France.
In race trim Mercedes were 0.431 off RB, and 0.510 off Ferrari in France.
In Austria though Mercedes averaged 1m10.5 to Red Bulls 1m9.5 or just under a second a lap difference.
Minus pitstops and safety cars etc.
So on a shorter track like Austria, the difference in the race was far larger, albeit the one lap quali pace was slightly larger in France.
Data can be found here.
https://www.fia.com/events/fia-formula- ... nformation