Jurgen von Diaz wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 18:21Verstappen, Norris, Räikkönen aren't feeding conspiracy theories like Lewis when George is dealing with Merc's screw ups also.
Kimi's fans did create a whole conspiracy theory about Santander and why he was kicked out of Ferrari the first time... I would know because of my username
Miserable racists who despair that a black man is the most successful athlete in a white dominated sport. There is not much else to understand. Tiger Woods, Serena Williams, Arthur Ashe, Jackie Robinson etc have all faced the similar scrutiny in their respective sportsToffeeTyres wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 16:08I feel exactly the same way. Well said and agree with everything you said. I don’t understand it eitherAlex_Z wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 15:22Why can't Lewis show frustration and vent during the race without the usual suspects in this thread labeling him as childish, playing the victim, or unprofessional? Meanwhile, drivers like Max Verstappen, Lando Norris, and Kimi Raikkonen often swear, lash out, or disrespect their engineers on the radio, yet they’re praised as brutally honest and authentic. Many users display unconscious racial bias against Lewis, and for certain users in this thread (they know who they are), it is a conscious choice. He isn’t afforded the same grace and leeway to express frustration as white drivers—Tsunoda is another driver who’s experienced similar treatment. It pains them a black driver is the most successful of all time
Last post on this please.Alex_Z wrote: ↑04 Dec 2024, 00:21Miserable racists who despair that a black man is the most successful athlete in a white dominated sport. There is not much else to understand. Tiger Woods, Serena Williams, Arthur Ashe, Jackie Robinson etc have all faced the similar scrutiny in their respective sportsToffeeTyres wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 16:08I feel exactly the same way. Well said and agree with everything you said. I don’t understand it eitherAlex_Z wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 15:22Why can't Lewis show frustration and vent during the race without the usual suspects in this thread labeling him as childish, playing the victim, or unprofessional? Meanwhile, drivers like Max Verstappen, Lando Norris, and Kimi Raikkonen often swear, lash out, or disrespect their engineers on the radio, yet they’re praised as brutally honest and authentic. Many users display unconscious racial bias against Lewis, and for certain users in this thread (they know who they are), it is a conscious choice. He isn’t afforded the same grace and leeway to express frustration as white drivers—Tsunoda is another driver who’s experienced similar treatment. It pains them a black driver is the most successful of all time
Oooh. Was hard to make out. Well thanks for joining the Mercedes 2024 thread. I suppose you wanted to get a preview of debating on Lewis Hamilton in preparation for Scuderia Ferrari team thread 2025?Jurgen von Diaz wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 06:16It's a photo of Kimi Räikkönen.PlatinumZealot wrote:Is that profile photo of a Ferrari driver? Or McLaren driver?Jurgen von Diaz wrote: ↑02 Dec 2024, 20:05I thought so too. Like I said, everything that happens to George is normal, but help me God, if something is wrong with Lewis. He has built this victim's temple around him this year. Ocon had no pit crew in Vegas when he pitted. No one cared or shouted conspiracy.
Wasn't it obvious that Santander slammed the money on the table, and Ferrari signed Alonso so Räikkönen would make room?KimiRai wrote:Jurgen von Diaz wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 18:21Verstappen, Norris, Räikkönen aren't feeding conspiracy theories like Lewis when George is dealing with Merc's screw ups also.Kimi's fans did create a whole conspiracy theory about Santander and why he was kicked out of Ferrari the first time... I would know because of my username
Your premise is based on a false assumption that the performance of their competitors remained static from 2023 to 2024. The car this year is probably as close to the front runners as they've ever been in this reg set. Just their competitors are that slightly bit ahead, or maybe a touch behind from race to race.GrizzleBoy wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 20:53It's also the most inconsistent car they've driven according to both drivers that mostly works in uncommon track conditions and all of the WDC/WCC positions are lower than last years.Matt2725 wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 20:32Like I said. Can we get back to serious commentary yet?
Rather than out of context asinine commentary designed to start arguments yet again?
Also the W15 apparently guided by George won 4 races unlike the previous year which won none. So he can't be that bad at pushing development.
Well George went from 8th last year to 6th this year and Lewis went from 3rd to 7th this year, but I wouldn't say there was an improvement there in the car just because it won 4 races, two of which relied on rain.
The W13 looked, in championship placement, to get there from team and driver operational competence with notable poor technical/design contribution. Also influenced in championship standings by teams other than RB being sub par in many aspect of overall performance.Matt2725 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2024, 11:00Your premise is based on a false assumption that the performance of their competitors remained static from 2023 to 2024. The car this year is probably as close to the front runners as they've ever been in this reg set. Just their competitors are that slightly bit ahead, or maybe a touch behind from race to race.GrizzleBoy wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 20:53It's also the most inconsistent car they've driven according to both drivers that mostly works in uncommon track conditions and all of the WDC/WCC positions are lower than last years.Matt2725 wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 20:32Like I said. Can we get back to serious commentary yet?
Rather than out of context asinine commentary designed to start arguments yet again?
Also the W15 apparently guided by George won 4 races unlike the previous year which won none. So he can't be that bad at pushing development.
Well George went from 8th last year to 6th this year and Lewis went from 3rd to 7th this year, but I wouldn't say there was an improvement there in the car just because it won 4 races, two of which relied on rain.
Article from today, talks about Lewis' struggles with the car but you get the general idea of why it overheats its rearsOverheatedTurbo wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 23:39Maybe this is the wrong thread for this question but what causes this single seater to be so bad with the rear tires? I know “low aeromap” and “stiff suspension” gets thrown here a lot, but surely there is much more to this than that, right?
Shovlin says: "If you look for a common theme, we have a car that is difficult to turn in the slower corners, and the way the drivers have to turn it is by sliding the rear on the way in and sliding the rear on the power on the way out.
"That adds [tyre] temperature, and dealing with that problem Lewis has found quite difficult.
"You could argue that Lewis was head and shoulders the best in the previous set of regulations. He certainly found driving the cars second nature.
"Lewis would set up the car so that, as the [rear of the] car came up [during braking] and you gained pitch, it would help you turn the car, and he relied on those elements. And that was how you generated performance in the previous set of regulations.
"He has struggled more with the way these cars run. These cars you need to run lower, you need to run stiffer, they are banging into the ground more, you haven't got as much movement in the platform from low to high speed."
I just think it's great that Raikkonen is Ferrari's last WDC.Jurgen von Diaz wrote: ↑04 Dec 2024, 08:10Wasn't it obvious that Santander slammed the money on the table, and Ferrari signed Alonso so Räikkönen would make room?KimiRai wrote:Jurgen von Diaz wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 18:21Verstappen, Norris, Räikkönen aren't feeding conspiracy theories like Lewis when George is dealing with Merc's screw ups also.Kimi's fans did create a whole conspiracy theory about Santander and why he was kicked out of Ferrari the first time... I would know because of my username
Luscion wrote: ↑04 Dec 2024, 12:01Article from today, talks about Lewis' struggles with the car but you get the general idea of why it overheats its rearsOverheatedTurbo wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 23:39Maybe this is the wrong thread for this question but what causes this single seater to be so bad with the rear tires? I know “low aeromap” and “stiff suspension” gets thrown here a lot, but surely there is much more to this than that, right?
https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/arti ... k4gnzgv3no
Shovlin says: "If you look for a common theme, we have a car that is difficult to turn in the slower corners, and the way the drivers have to turn it is by sliding the rear on the way in and sliding the rear on the power on the way out.
"That adds [tyre] temperature, and dealing with that problem Lewis has found quite difficult.
"You could argue that Lewis was head and shoulders the best in the previous set of regulations. He certainly found driving the cars second nature.
"Lewis would set up the car so that, as the [rear of the] car came up [during braking] and you gained pitch, it would help you turn the car, and he relied on those elements. And that was how you generated performance in the previous set of regulations.
"He has struggled more with the way these cars run. These cars you need to run lower, you need to run stiffer, they are banging into the ground more, you haven't got as much movement in the platform from low to high speed."
I'd imagine that given the vast majority of people will support Lewis instead of Geroge and the vast majority support a driver, not a team, it will be something like 70% of fans will move away from Mercedes.
Sounds more like the Vettel dilemma, what he ran into in 2014. You get used to a type of car, you like that type of car, you dominate with that type of car, then the regs change and your speed doesn't translate 100%. The best should always adapt.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑04 Dec 2024, 15:20Luscion wrote: ↑04 Dec 2024, 12:01Article from today, talks about Lewis' struggles with the car but you get the general idea of why it overheats its rearsOverheatedTurbo wrote: ↑03 Dec 2024, 23:39Maybe this is the wrong thread for this question but what causes this single seater to be so bad with the rear tires? I know “low aeromap” and “stiff suspension” gets thrown here a lot, but surely there is much more to this than that, right?
https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/arti ... k4gnzgv3no
Shovlin says: "If you look for a common theme, we have a car that is difficult to turn in the slower corners, and the way the drivers have to turn it is by sliding the rear on the way in and sliding the rear on the power on the way out.
"That adds [tyre] temperature, and dealing with that problem Lewis has found quite difficult.
"You could argue that Lewis was head and shoulders the best in the previous set of regulations. He certainly found driving the cars second nature.
"Lewis would set up the car so that, as the [rear of the] car came up [during braking] and you gained pitch, it would help you turn the car, and he relied on those elements. And that was how you generated performance in the previous set of regulations.
"He has struggled more with the way these cars run. These cars you need to run lower, you need to run stiffer, they are banging into the ground more, you haven't got as much movement in the platform from low to high speed."
Very good. Very good.
This explains our suspicions. This generation of cars just doesn't feel natural to the older drivers. And the Mercedes is the lowest and the stiffest!!
Alonso too is slower than ge would have been. Stroll shouldn't be so close to Alonso.
The younger drivers joined when the cars were boats. So they adjusted better.