.ispano6 wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 06:33For those of you ragging on Yuki having a big mouth, you most likely didn't watch the setting in which he made these remarks in Japanese. These translations have no context in which he was saying this. He was at the Honda Aoyama HQ on the final day before they were to close the venue for renovations and he was sat along side his junior carting coach. He himself said he had to be realistic about his chances but he was approaching the weekend no different than if he would have been if he were in the VCARB, but that with Red Bull the car is capable of a podium being that it IS THE TOP Red Bull team. His goal to be on the podium is because he feels if he can extract the potential of the RB21 and be comfortable with it, he should aim to be on the podium, considering how strong Max has been at Suzuka in prior years. He acknowledges he won't have the same set up as Max and that he wants to build up the weekend from FP1 and if he can be confident in the car then the results should come, and if that results in a podium it would be a fitting and ideal end for Honda, RBR and the fans. He feels the stars have aligned and there is no greater pressure than for this occasion and relishes in it, this is what he has been preparing himself for. He said himself there probably won't be another chance or experience that would top his nerves ever in his life and he can't guarantee a podium but that is what he has to aim for at this event. He asks for everyone to cheer him on and not to tell him to take it easy, but instead pile up the expectations on him. I hope he has his latte before the race and is wired up because he still is experiencing jetlag and the Red Bull show run was a good wake up exercise for him. Good luck Yuki, we're cheering you on.
Trying to go "independent" with setups is where most of the 2nd Red Bull drivers go wrong, but I'm hopefully wrong. Just going with the Max setup, with perhaps some front wing fine tuning seems like the safer way to get up to speed. Then you don't question if it's you or a "bad setup" which will leave you chasing your tail.ispano6 wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 06:33His goal to be on the podium is because he feels if he can extract the potential of the RB21 and be comfortable with it, he should aim to be on the podium, considering how strong Max has been at Suzuka in prior years. He acknowledges he won't have the same set up as Max and that he wants to build up the weekend from FP1 and if he can be confident in the car then the results should come, and if that results in a podium it would be a fitting and ideal end for Honda, RBR and the fans.
Thank you for this to give better understanding.ispano6 wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 06:33For those of you ragging on Yuki having a big mouth, you most likely didn't watch the setting in which he made these remarks in Japanese. These translations have no context in which he was saying this. He was at the Honda Aoyama HQ on the final day before they were to close the venue for renovations and he was sat along side his junior carting coach. He himself said he had to be realistic about his chances but he was approaching the weekend no different than if he would have been if he were in the VCARB, but that with Red Bull the car is capable of a podium being that it IS THE TOP Red Bull team. His goal to be on the podium is because he feels if he can extract the potential of the RB21 and be comfortable with it, he should aim to be on the podium, considering how strong Max has been at Suzuka in prior years. He acknowledges he won't have the same set up as Max and that he wants to build up the weekend from FP1 and if he can be confident in the car then the results should come, and if that results in a podium it would be a fitting and ideal end for Honda, RBR and the fans. He feels the stars have aligned and there is no greater pressure than for this occasion and relishes in it, this is what he has been preparing himself for. He said himself there probably won't be another chance or experience that would top his nerves ever in his life and he can't guarantee a podium but that is what he has to aim for at this event. He asks for everyone to cheer him on and not to tell him to take it easy, but instead pile up the expectations on him. I hope he has his latte before the race and is wired up because he still is experiencing jetlag and the Red Bull show run was a good wake up exercise for him. Good luck Yuki, we're cheering you on.
Tvetovnato wrote: ↑02 Apr 2025, 21:40I never ever said that Lawson is not part of the problem. He very much is. It would be a much wiser choice to start with Tsunoda from the beginning, even though I expect him to only fair marginally better and dice with the midfield himself. He likely won’t put a dent in the other top teams anyhow, which is what Red Bull expects him to. When he fails, what then? Hadjar?
Even if they deflected slightly from Lawson, anyone can see that he won’t have a sniff at a top drive ever again and will only be a seat filler for the rest of his F1 career. But thanks for ”saving him”. And even if they tried to put the crosshairs on themselves, they are now trying to sell us that Newey had a part in it and other crap. They can try to deflect all they want, but the fact remains that other teams can build very good cars which two drivers can drive very quickly. Red Bull can’t, and they won’t succeed with anyone in the other seat if they cannot address that. So this mess will only repeat itself.
And just out of curiosity, since you laugh at The Race (which was just a random example) who is the ”judge and jury” of F1? Who did you have in mind?
Okay so now Lawson is very much part of the problem. That wasn't the impression I got from your original post quoted above. But if you say so now I will accept it and conclude that we agree on that point.The writers at The Race were pretty unanimous in their verdict that the problem lies in the RB management as soon as the news broke, and not so much in Lawson.
I don't think anyone begrudges Yuki for having high goals in his mind, but maybe now is not the time to make them public and raise the expectations on himself, seeing what happened to Liam. Let's just get into Q2 or maybe even Q3 for a start, score some points.ispano6 wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 06:33For those of you ragging on Yuki having a big mouth, you most likely didn't watch the setting in which he made these remarks in Japanese. These translations have no context in which he was saying this. He was at the Honda Aoyama HQ on the final day before they were to close the venue for renovations and he was sat along side his junior carting coach. He himself said he had to be realistic about his chances but he was approaching the weekend no different than if he would have been if he were in the VCARB, but that with Red Bull the car is capable of a podium being that it IS THE TOP Red Bull team. His goal to be on the podium is because he feels if he can extract the potential of the RB21 and be comfortable with it, he should aim to be on the podium, considering how strong Max has been at Suzuka in prior years. He acknowledges he won't have the same set up as Max and that he wants to build up the weekend from FP1 and if he can be confident in the car then the results should come, and if that results in a podium it would be a fitting and ideal end for Honda, RBR and the fans. He feels the stars have aligned and there is no greater pressure than for this occasion and relishes in it, this is what he has been preparing himself for. He said himself there probably won't be another chance or experience that would top his nerves ever in his life and he can't guarantee a podium but that is what he has to aim for at this event. He asks for everyone to cheer him on and not to tell him to take it easy, but instead pile up the expectations on him. I hope he has his latte before the race and is wired up because he still is experiencing jetlag and the Red Bull show run was a good wake up exercise for him. Good luck Yuki, we're cheering you on.
maybe, yeah, but the team said they signed him to be able to fight for the constructors championship, and that only works out if he is a steady podium contender anyway. So it's pretty clear what's expected, to be honest. Not from race one, but asap.
The car doesn't look like a steady podium contender nevermind a WCC winner, so I highly doubt that is the expectation right now. Remember, if he finishes last amongst the top cars he is 8th.
yeah, of course, but I wouldn't really expect this to lower the expectations - more on the contrary. Now the team doesn't need a solid 2nd guy anymore but a 2nd Verstappen. If Yuki isn't that, they'll look elsewhere.Cs98 wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 11:43The car doesn't look like a steady podium contender nevermind a WCC winner, so I highly doubt that is the expectation right now. Remember, if he finishes last amongst the top cars he is 8th.
The team is probably aware that doesn't exist or at the very least isn't realistic while Verstappen is at the team. Which top driver in their right mind would choose to join red bull ATM? Anyone they're able to get in the seat it's because they have no other good options, and a driver of the level that is seemingly required to handle the car is high enough that they'd have multiple good options if they were availablesearch wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 12:01yeah, of course, but I wouldn't really expect this to lower the expectations - more on the contrary. Now the team doesn't need a solid 2nd guy anymore but a 2nd Verstappen. If Yuki isn't that, they'll look elsewhere.
I have to say, that's probably finding place in the list of top 10 most 'cocky-BS' answers that an F1 driver has given as a reply. I wouldn't be surprised if he puts it in the wall during the weekend, if this is the attitude. Hope that doesn't happen.Q: (Tomás Slafer – DAZN Spain) Yuki, it’s easy to see that the Red Bull is a tricky car to drive. Do you know exactly what you need to do, or changing your driving skills to adapt to the RB21 or is it something you need to learn in the next few races?
YT: First of all, I didn’t feel yet the exact trickiness that the drivers are saying. I have a bit of an idea from the simulator but it’s always a bit different from simulator to real car, so I’ll see after FP1 if I either have to change set-up or…. But I don’t think I’ll have to change my driving style because in the end so far it works well I guess with VCARB, otherwise I wouldn’t be here wearing this logo. So I will just do whatever I was doing previously and I’ll just go step by step to build the pace and everything. Let’s see. Maybe I don’t have to do that. Maybe the car is straightaway good. I think Red Bull had pretty good performance last season, both cars, so I’m quite looking forward to it.
Have you wondered why there are 9 teams that don't win each year? The issue is not that they aren't listening to Max. This "issue" is that another team did a better job with the tools and people at their disposal in the same timeframe. Do you think that Wache and company simply don't want Max or Yuki or Perez to have a car that they can drive and are stubborn? That's never really the case. The problem is typically you simply don't know how to get to the endpoint that you seek.
Only with Checo. Checo's driving style is very unorthodox, even before he left Racing Point this was known. And Checo also had a right to go independent with his setup because he know something was off with the car.AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 08:42
Trying to go "independent" with setups is where most of the 2nd Red Bull drivers go wrong, but I'm hopefully wrong. Just going with the Max setup, with perhaps some front wing fine tuning seems like the safer way to get up to speed. Then you don't question if it's you or a "bad setup" which will leave you chasing your tail.