dialtone wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 21:30
Good victory at Imola, terrible track as we all know already, so boring race overall except maybe for the last couple of hours.
Buemi defense on Fuoco, while great, just show the track is awful for racing anything but karts.
Despite the many complains on BoP I think it's pretty good now, avg pace from best stints from each constructor from reddit thread here
https://www.reddit.com/r/wec/comments/1 ... ar_report/:
Ferrari #51 - 93.943
BMW #20 - 94.050
TOYOTA #7 - 94.062
ALPINE #36 - 94.214
PORSCHE #6 - 94.255
PEUGEOT #94 - 94.363
CADILLAC #12 - 94.633
ASTON MARTIN #009 - 95.734
Looks pretty close to me, Ferrari at this point just has better tire management as they were the only ones able to run the softs consistently the last 2 hours, but they are starting to get pretty close.
Ferrari had 1 second in hand during qualifying. In the race they never went any faster than they needed to because you are punished in the BOP for the next round for showing too much speed. So there's no point taking the stint averages into consideration. That obfuscates the pace due to many factors. 2 of the cars were trapped behind slower cars for most of the race due to mistakes putting them down the order. The race winning car spent most of the race fuel saving. They ran the slower soft tire but it didn't matter that it was slower because they had the pace in hand thanks to the BOP. The lead car triple stinted tires, got slow towards the end, and it still didn't matter. The pace they showed was "artificial" because of using worse tire strategies which made them slower, but still faster than anyone else. How they didn't get the 1-2-3 is classic Ferrari.
Why does Ferrari have less weight and more power than both Porsche and Toyota in Imola where 95% of the circuit is below 250km/h? Are they proud of winning like this? Ferrari wouldn't beat Toyota here on a level playing field. When Toyota won all the races in 2023, they had more weight and less power than everyone. That's what you call meritable. Winning despite BOP penalty. Ferrari's victory is hollow because they had a significant performance advantage while also running with less weight and more power than their direct rivals (Porsche and Toyota).
Was laughing so hard when Coletta said Qatar and Imola were the result of Ferrari's winter developments. They were running 20+kg lighter than Toyota and Porsche in Qatar (the most weight sensitive circuit on the calendar), They got more power and less weight than Porsche and Toyota for Imola. Whatever, yeah winter developments...
This is your winter development:
2024 Imola:
Toyota: 1060kg, 516kw
Porsche: 1033kg, 508kw
Ferrari: 1041kg, 510kw
2025 Imola
Toyota: +5kg (1065), -16kW (500)
Porsche: +20kg (1053), -5kW (503)
Ferrari: +4kg (1045), +0kW (508)
Toyota and Porsche were kneecapped. +20kg for Porsche? -16kW for Toyota?
dialtone wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 21:30
Ferrari at this point just has better tire management
lol. It is a choice to be blind.
After two races, Toyota is 39 points behind Ferrari, which is already assured of heading into the Le Mans 24 Hours at the top of the manufacturers' standings. "Ferrari was in a class of its own," Floury (Toyota) concluded. "It's been the same in Qatar.
"There is a very high risk that this will continue for much of the year and that the title will be decided by mid-season. So for sure there's a lot of frustration. Last year we were fighting for the championship with Porsche, and this year we are both fighting between P6 and P14, and the cars are the same, the tyres are the same, the teams are the same, the drivers are the same..."
Make of that what you will...
"We're not happy with eighth and 11th," analysed Thomas Laudenbach (Porsche). "The team fought hard and did a great job. We now need to step back and take a closer look at everything. The performance differences between the various Hypercars give us pause for thought!"
It doesn't turn.