Paa wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 01:00
f1isgood wrote: ↑20 Apr 2025, 23:51
Re Penalty: Fair but I would 100 percent do what Max did by taking an advantage for a penalty. Red Bull couldn't have known the car would actually be good.
I don't get the logic. I would think, that the worse the car the more you would like to avoid the penalty.
If Max had terrible deg, he would have been overtaken on track by Piastri, and he wouldn't have been able to create a gap to Russell/Charles so he would have just lost position to them as well with the penalty. Vs giving back 1 place to Piastri, losing 1 place and 1.5 sec in the process, then try to keep Merc/Ferrari behind on track.
Sticking to a penalty only makes sense if you have a very quick car and you believe, you can create the penalty gap in free air.
So far, the car's performance this season indicates the following: If the car is decent in quali it actually translates to somewhat decent race pace. My expectation after qualification was if Max could pull a Suzuka, which is to drive 50 laps without errors, he would win. In fact, that is actually what would have happened if not for a bad start.
Your argument is centered around the point that you basically give up any chance of a win when you are scared by a potential penalty. In the case where the car degged a lot and he had to fight Mercs and Ferrari, there's really not much to lose. A five second penalty barely throws you off from the number of potential points you gain or lose. Top cars are well clear of the midfield. The points are very lopsided at the top. There's far little difference in finishing P7 and P8 versus P1 and P2. A win was on the cards, and looking at the race as a whole, Max did what he had to after the start. He was the quicker driver but we know that only in hindsight.
Call a spade, a spade.