bluechris wrote: ↑16 Jun 2024, 22:00
So you think this is a small feat? To come after 50 years and do back to back wins? What does this say for the team? How high you need to be technology, mechanical, strategy etc to do that?
To me this is great news and raise Ferrari alot in my eyes and gives me hope for F1 also.
Why are people so poorly adapted to accepting nuance?
Just because I argue that winning Le Mans isn't the absolute pinnacle of motorsports achievements does not mean I think it's some negligible accomplishment. There's a whole world of middle ground there, and I certainly do not rate it lowly at all. It's impressive for sure, though I would also argue Ferrari were a bit fortunate in terms of the lead Toyota losing around 40 seconds or so because of the #51 Ferrari spinning it, which probably made the deciding difference.
And we cant ignore that Ferrari were granted a nice BoP boost for Le Mans, and have not won a single WEC race outside these Le Mans races. Just saying. Even Toyota decided to not risk it all for the win and told their drivers to take it easy at the end for the sake of the series championship they will undoubtedly win.
At the end of the day, the whole operation and situation of Ferrari in WEC is basically completely unrelated to F1. And in fact, we should hope so, cuz Toyota have the best car in WEC and BoP is the only thing making the races seem closer than they otherwise would be.
F1 has none of that. And rightfully so, cuz it's a real competition. Ferrari need to actually win on pure merit, and that's a much harder thing to do, especially with how much tougher the competition is and how much more money get poured into this, even with the budget cap.
F1 is the pinnacle. You can accept winning Le Mans as a greater accomplishment if you want, but I think you're lying to yourself to make up for knowing that they aren't yet good enough to win in F1, yet. Which is itself an admission that you know F1 is harder and more meaningful.