Abu Dhabi is way softer for the tyres with the new track layout. Ofc there's the engine, but there's also the fact it has became a start/stop track with no big radius corner. Ferrari makes most of the performance under braking, traction, and straight line speedbasti313 wrote: ↑30 Oct 2023, 13:20Perez will maybe beat himself and if two at the front are up for a tango, that is one or two places more. This is what I mean with "look for possibilities in the race".Spoutnik wrote: ↑30 Oct 2023, 10:45We will see. But I think beating Piastri, Russell and Perez is doable.basti313 wrote: ↑30 Oct 2023, 10:35
Well, this is just a straw. Brazil is a two stop, Abu is a two stop....I do not see Ferrari ahead of any Mercs there, too much room to f*** up the strategy and too easy to overtake.
Furthermore there is McLaren in the game, I expect them to be ahead in both venues.
My bet would be to take engine penalties in Brazil and set the car up for the Sprint. Then take as many points with a strong engine from the Sprint and look for possibilities in the race...they will anyways not beat McLaren and Merc on merit there.
Concerning Abu Dhabi I believe it will be one of the best track for the SF23 characteristics
Both Abu and Brazil are hard on the tires, I guess your hope is mainly on the engine end? I see no way how Ferrari should be better on tires than Merc an McLaren. So my take is....do everything with the engine and get a new one for this.