Agreed. People forget there was no time to properly setup the car. RB20 will find back its feet next race. The Mclaren is closer for sure, but I am not sold on the big celebrations that its somehow now equal to RB20.Vettel165 wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 01:01Nothing major it happens, Red Bull usually has problems with sprint weekends. I think there is a strong possibility that things will go back to normal with Max dominating, while we go back to Imola. But Mclaren is getting closer. Looks like our car likes circuits with low- track temperatures, Max was complaining with the car sliding around from FP1. I am not worried for now, its good to see the new winner, but alarms might go off if our race pace in Imola is also not that good. But I see Red Bull improving again, and finding the problem, that we had in Miami.
Not even remotely deserved p4.AR3-GP wrote:Sainz got a 5 second penalty post race so Perez got P4.
MCL brought a new car basically and clearly had setup issues of their own. Everyone was on the same boat. This track and temperature simply didn’t work well for RBR and Ferrari and MCL updates worked very well.ringo wrote:Agreed. People forget there was no time to properly setup the car. RB20 will find back its feet next race. The Mclaren is closer for sure, but I am not sold on the big celebrations that its somehow now equal to RB20.Vettel165 wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 01:01Nothing major it happens, Red Bull usually has problems with sprint weekends. I think there is a strong possibility that things will go back to normal with Max dominating, while we go back to Imola. But Mclaren is getting closer. Looks like our car likes circuits with low- track temperatures, Max was complaining with the car sliding around from FP1. I am not worried for now, its good to see the new winner, but alarms might go off if our race pace in Imola is also not that good. But I see Red Bull improving again, and finding the problem, that we had in Miami.
Norris had the best pace, no question. But lucking out the safety car doesn't qualify for "doing the better job" in my book.ME4ME wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 09:26Damage or not it was self inflicted. Mclaren and Norris just did a better job this weekend, put themselves in a position to benefit in case of a safety car. We've seen Red Bull do that throughout the Mercedes-years.
Ultimately everyone was inconsistent throughout the weekend, Norris, Hamilton and Ricciardo particulary so. But as a team Red Bull got it somewhat right on friday and saturday but were found lacking on sunday.
equal?ringo wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 04:10Agreed. People forget there was no time to properly setup the car. RB20 will find back its feet next race. The Mclaren is closer for sure, but I am not sold on the big celebrations that its somehow now equal to RB20.Vettel165 wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 01:01Nothing major it happens, Red Bull usually has problems with sprint weekends. I think there is a strong possibility that things will go back to normal with Max dominating, while we go back to Imola. But Mclaren is getting closer. Looks like our car likes circuits with low- track temperatures, Max was complaining with the car sliding around from FP1. I am not worried for now, its good to see the new winner, but alarms might go off if our race pace in Imola is also not that good. But I see Red Bull improving again, and finding the problem, that we had in Miami.
I think Ringo is right. We've seen before the RBR have off days. Singapore 2023 for example where the pace was no-where. RBR struggled in Miami. Fact. I think I even remember someone saying that humidity was quite high in the race. 60%? Which may have played a factor.avantman wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 10:16equal?ringo wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 04:10Agreed. People forget there was no time to properly setup the car. RB20 will find back its feet next race. The Mclaren is closer for sure, but I am not sold on the big celebrations that its somehow now equal to RB20.Vettel165 wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 01:01Nothing major it happens, Red Bull usually has problems with sprint weekends. I think there is a strong possibility that things will go back to normal with Max dominating, while we go back to Imola. But Mclaren is getting closer. Looks like our car likes circuits with low- track temperatures, Max was complaining with the car sliding around from FP1. I am not worried for now, its good to see the new winner, but alarms might go off if our race pace in Imola is also not that good. But I see Red Bull improving again, and finding the problem, that we had in Miami.
Mclaren was dominant pace wise this weekend. It wasn't even close.
As I mentioned before, McLaren have caught up with the RedBull-Ferrari lead group, now it's a trio. McLaren showed the same in China as well, even before this large upgrade that happened in Miami. They are in the ballpark, much closer than 2023. The disadvantages presented by a sprint weekend is the same for all teams, some suffered more than others, some got it right.
Even this, I think is overplayed by official and social media. The Redbull was on H and was struggling for grip because their use of H was purely based on 'educated guess' rather than actual running in FP. Yes, they have gotten it right before, but we must accept that there is equal chance of getting it wrong. The RedBull pace on M was very good, matching McLaren and Ferrari. We know the Mercedes is a diva car, even the team doesn't know when it will come good, when it will be a disaster. It so happened that on reduced fuel load, on M tyres, Hamilton was able to stick to the tail of Perez struggling in his car. Yes, there is talent gap, yes the car gap is reduced on the specific day, yes there was a tyre compound advantage for the chasing car. The only thing that kept Hamilton behind was the draggy nature of the Mercedes despite the reduced wing.chrisc90 wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 11:06What is a shocker though, is Perez fighting with the Mercedes of Lewis. He should be well above what the W15 is capable of. Maybe once again, we will see him drop off as the season enters the European side of things. He needs to step up, or I hope the team have no problem in dropping Sainz a offer.
Ahaha, another phantom floor damage like Perez in Australia They'd better look at downforce levels and balance with that new low-level wing, it wasn't the right choice in Australia and was too low here as wellRikhart wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 09:19https://racingnews365.com/horner-reveal ... ck-mistake
He had floor damage, I thought this immediately after seeing the replay of him going over the bollard.