F1 is always relative. If the others improve more it means they did a better job.MattLightBlue wrote: ↑22 Jul 2024, 10:40Ferrari lost their main path in development, that is for sure. We are too much delusional in this thread though: without the incredible improvement of McLaren and Mercedes we would be talking about Ferrari and RedBull being on the same pace and fighting for victory.Xyz22 wrote: ↑22 Jul 2024, 10:19Ferrari is nowhere in fast corners. Moreover, McLaren improved massively since the upgrade package in Miami in terms of efficiency.r85 wrote: ↑22 Jul 2024, 09:47
https://formu1a.uno/it/vasseur-la-direz ... -la-sosta/
"Here we were fighting for the podium, we fought with Mercedes and Red Bull, but we still lack a bit of pace to compete with McLaren."
"In 2023 we finished 65 seconds behind Red Bull, now we are 20 seconds behind McLaren. It is not enough, but it is progress."
No delusion here, he's still keeping it real. Besides that, I think Ferrari will be battling McLaren next weekend slightly behind the Mercedes. Mercedes has been dumping drag since a few races and have a well balanced car when it's not hot. McLaren are quite draggy and will fall towards the Ferrari at the end of the stints.
Ferrari won't fight with McLaren.
Also Vasseur is redirecting the narrative. It's true that compared to last Ferrari improved and the gap was much smaller from the leader but the real issue is that the relative performance decreased massively since Monaco. In Imola for example Ferrari was ahead of Mercedes and "only" 7s behind the leaders.
Silverstone was a massacre and in Austria Sainz would have finished over 20s behind in a normal race.
The goal this season was to improve the car and deliver a solid performance through the year with consistent improvements. Ferrari failed once again to do that despite RB vulnerability.
Moreover we are still seeing crazy and insane strategy calls like the one in Silverstone and this one yesterday. Also the 3(4) stops strategy in Austria was also extremely questionable.