The call to put Norris on softs at precisely the time they did was a masterstroke really. Norris was at times 3-4s quicker than the frontrunners in those wet laps. It allowed him to make up some of the time they lost from awful start of the raceMostlyeels wrote: ↑31 Jul 2023, 02:50Yep, that sounds like the quandary they were in: produce a whole package for 2 races, and lose out in 1 (Spa), or produce a half-and-half package that would've sort of worked in all races, but (a) not maximised points, and (b) not allowed them to fully test the step change the upgrade provided.
Spa was painful, no doubt But Lando maintaining P7 was pretty awesome! Some issues with the car (hards and steering, the commentators mentioned), and then stretching out those softs at the end. When I saw them put on the softs with 26 laps to go you could see the paths strategy might take, and I really thought at that point it was a massive roll of the dice to stretch them out, but they made it work.
Such a damn shame for Piastri, but he showed his quality during other parts of the weekend.
And the track in the 2nd half of the race seemed not to be hurting the tyres as much as the first half. Of course that always happens as fuel burns off, but it was extreme. I think it must've rubbered in quickly and not too badly affected by the rain. Really helped the long soft stint
To an extent it was a gamble to hope the softs would last 26 laps, but it really paid off despite the risk
Very cool strategy. IMO the team is proving itself to be operationally very strong even under greater scrutiny & pressure (that comes from having a faster car)