Quite true, the teams have a vast amount of data to base their decisions on and in the majority of cases will make the right decision in hindsight.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑17 Sep 2023, 18:10The strategy calls as you well say, sometimes work, sometimes they don’t… But the reactions here and comments when they make the calls are definitely “Armchair Experts”… If people don’t realize that:Seerix wrote: ↑17 Sep 2023, 17:41I don't undestand what you get from "I told you so" posts at all. They did not show armchair experts in Zandvoort. Sometimes it works, sometimes it does not. Nothing wrong in discussing options. Result based replies are useless.
The actual strategy on Lando's radio was - stay out if VSC, box if full SC. They were considering boxing after seeing both Mercs went it, but VCS ended meanwhile.
A) They have more data than anyone here would dream of having
B) They have tools that allow them to simulate permutations of outcome depending on the decision
C) There is not one person looking at the strategy, there is an “strategy team”, who uses A) and B) to make this decisions.
But around here, people watching a race on TV think they can make a better decision than the team
Will they get it wrong some times? Absolutely… Zandvoort was a matter of amount of rain, the amount of rain and duration was expected to be lower than it was, if their expectations (based on the information they had) would have been accurate, they would have been called geniuses… It didn’t pan out, it happens.
Funny thing is, if they take a risky gamble and it doesn’t work, they get blasted… If they take the more cautious approach, they get blasted for never taking risks… People will never be pleased I guess.
I think the only thing that gets me sometimes is the reluctance to split strategies if the pit strategy decision isn't obvious. Like today, when it seemed like there was an argument for either strategy at the end Ferrari went all in on staying out while Mercedes went the opposite way with both cars.