I guess George isn't too happy with the narrative that Hamilton did all the work and that George's early season advantage wasn't down to his own ability to adapt to the new car better than Hamilton did."For sure, at the start of the year, Lewis made more drastic set-up changes within the confines of the car, but that was purely because I was in a happier place and he was still trying to find the set-up that suited him. “But when it came to development, it would always get alternated from one week to the next. And that’s how it always is, we are on equal terms here.
“Whenever there was a development item, it does disrupt your race weekend. That’s why it’s always fair - that’s why the team always do it one week with Lewis, one week with me. And we’re still doing that now, for what it’s worth.”
It makes sense for George to be more explicit about it as the current narrative puts his work to shade.AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Dec 2022, 05:25George Russell's perspective on the early seasons experiments of Hamilton:
https://www.crash.net/f1/news/1018065/1 ... xperiments
He says that each driver alternated the development parts from one weekend to another. He says that Hamilton's experiments primarily revolved around his own setups and that the reason George did not make as many "experimental" changes to his setups was because he was more comfortable with the car than Hamilton was. Hamilton was making changes to make the car suit him more.
I guess George isn't too happy with the narrative that Hamilton did all the work and that George's early season advantage wasn't down to his own ability to adapt to the new car better than Hamilton did."For sure, at the start of the year, Lewis made more drastic set-up changes within the confines of the car, but that was purely because I was in a happier place and he was still trying to find the set-up that suited him. “But when it came to development, it would always get alternated from one week to the next. And that’s how it always is, we are on equal terms here.
“Whenever there was a development item, it does disrupt your race weekend. That’s why it’s always fair - that’s why the team always do it one week with Lewis, one week with me. And we’re still doing that now, for what it’s worth.”
Just as I said and thought all along, it's a myth pushed by Hamilton fanatics to try and find an excuse for Russell beating Hamilton, Hamilton doesn't help matters because he hints at it as well.AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Dec 2022, 05:25George Russell's perspective on the early seasons experiments of Hamilton:
https://www.crash.net/f1/news/1018065/1 ... xperiments
He says that each driver alternated the development parts from one weekend to another. He says that Hamilton's experiments primarily revolved around his own setups and that the reason George did not make as many "experimental" changes to his setups was because he was more comfortable with the car than Hamilton was. Hamilton was making changes to make the car suit him more.
I guess George isn't too happy with the narrative that Hamilton did all the work and that George's early season advantage wasn't down to his own ability to adapt to the new car better than Hamilton did."For sure, at the start of the year, Lewis made more drastic set-up changes within the confines of the car, but that was purely because I was in a happier place and he was still trying to find the set-up that suited him. “But when it came to development, it would always get alternated from one week to the next. And that’s how it always is, we are on equal terms here.
“Whenever there was a development item, it does disrupt your race weekend. That’s why it’s always fair - that’s why the team always do it one week with Lewis, one week with me. And we’re still doing that now, for what it’s worth.”
PhillipM wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 15:18Don't other drivers ever go through these events? Didn't a certain Schumacher win a race the day after one of his parents passed away?
I don't think these sort of things really have a bearing on how you perform once you are strapped in and in charge of a flying machine, negative thoughts soon leave your head once you are experiencing sensations that a F1 car brings.
You mean apart from breaking up with his partner and a friend passing away?
Fair n square..except the 2 podiums that he lucked into with the safety carharty71 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 15:33Russell has rightly set the record straight, he defeated Hamilton fair & square in a car that was difficult to get to grips with in the early part of the season.
I believe Hamilton struggled more relative to Russell because the porpoising fudged up his braking excellence, seeing as though this is probably his strongest trait in driving ability it hurt him more than Russell. That's on him though, you have to adapt to the machiney you've got, he doesn't get a free pass for it.
So fair & square then, it's not Russell's fault that Hamilton didn't have the sense to pit during one of those occasions, and, do you think two podiums would have overturned the points gap, no, thought as much.Mchamilton wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 17:41Fair n square..except the 2 podiums that he lucked into with the safety carharty71 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 15:33Russell has rightly set the record straight, he defeated Hamilton fair & square in a car that was difficult to get to grips with in the early part of the season.
I believe Hamilton struggled more relative to Russell because the porpoising fudged up his braking excellence, seeing as though this is probably his strongest trait in driving ability it hurt him more than Russell. That's on him though, you have to adapt to the machiney you've got, he doesn't get a free pass for it.
Oh yeah I forgot it's entirely the drivers decision to pit or not isn't it.harty71 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 17:51So fair & square then, it's not Russell's fault that Hamilton didn't have the sense to pit during one of those occasions, and, do you think two podiums would have overturned the points gap, no, thought as much.Mchamilton wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 17:41Fair n square..except the 2 podiums that he lucked into with the safety carharty71 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 15:33Russell has rightly set the record straight, he defeated Hamilton fair & square in a car that was difficult to get to grips with in the early part of the season.
I believe Hamilton struggled more relative to Russell because the porpoising fudged up his braking excellence, seeing as though this is probably his strongest trait in driving ability it hurt him more than Russell. That's on him though, you have to adapt to the machiney you've got, he doesn't get a free pass for it.
It was entirely Russell's wasn't it, race strategy awareness is part of a drivers arsenal, Russell is first class in that department.Mchamilton wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 18:26Oh yeah I forgot it's entirely the drivers decision to pit or not isn't it.harty71 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 17:51So fair & square then, it's not Russell's fault that Hamilton didn't have the sense to pit during one of those occasions, and, do you think two podiums would have overturned the points gap, no, thought as much.Mchamilton wrote: ↑05 Dec 2022, 17:41
Fair n square..except the 2 podiums that he lucked into with the safety car