Was it some other Andrea Stella behind the scenes at Ferrari when Schumacher and Alonso had their run-ins with team orders?
Was it some other Andrea Stella behind the scenes at Ferrari when Schumacher and Alonso had their run-ins with team orders?
Well he wasn't the team principal, this isn't Ferrari and we don't have Schumacher.
I think Verstappens “what tap? I didn’t feel anything” was telling lol. Wouldn’t surprise me a bit if that was the intention all along to make Lando/Mclaren pay a price.Arcanum wrote: ↑05 Oct 2025, 18:55Watching the start a few times, it looked a little like Verstappen backed Norris into Piastri.
Verstappen wasn't particularly quick through T3, and Norris wasn't out of shape until he hit Verstappen, while also being right under Verstappen's rear wing.
"Payback" for Saturday?
And McLaren will be fine with that outcome as long as they are fair to both drivers. And I'm pretty sure most of the team's fans will be as well. The culture of this team is very different to most other teams on the grid (and even in most other sports) and many other fans don't "get it"McLarenHonda wrote: ↑05 Oct 2025, 19:35McLaren are just sleeping! They’ll wait till Max gets within 25 points of Piastri…
You have both of your cars close behind Verstapen…why not try and undercut with at least one of them? It’s what all teams would do if they had the chance! What a nonsense championship by McLaren…they’ll just lose the WDC in the end and then pretend they don’t care…
They seem to have issues with how much (or little) time to spend on decisions. After the Leclerc-Norris pitman they hilariously named car #4 for an unsafe release. Or deciding not to deliberate on a penalty until after the race - they had an hour before race start. Just two of many.....gshevlin wrote: ↑06 Oct 2025, 01:12Reminder: The race stewards looked at the Norris-Piastri incident and rapidly decided to do nothing, which tells me that they saw it as a racing incident. I am not sure why Oscar spent most of the race stewing over the outcome. His car was fine, and he was quick all race.
Why would we debate that this early? I think Oscar is a smart young chap and knows where he is best off. He is loved, he is on the rise, and is at a team still in upward trajectory.
Pretty sure Stella has said the team has stopped developing this years car with upgrades with a focus onto next year nowDarth-Piekus wrote: ↑05 Oct 2025, 23:25Now that the team got the Constructor's Championship back to back they have to help our drivers even with a last minute upgrade to secure the Driver's Championship and may the best of the two Mclaren drivers win.
Yes, and the opposite of these rules is "Keep your position" and "Fernando is faster than you".
Was he? He only could catch Verstappen and Norris when they were in traffic. I am not sure why, but Oscar was missing a lot of pace.gshevlin wrote: ↑06 Oct 2025, 01:12Reminder: The race stewards looked at the Norris-Piastri incident and rapidly decided to do nothing, which tells me that they saw it as a racing incident. I am not sure why Oscar spent most of the race stewing over the outcome. His car was fine, and he was quick all race.
Finally some life in the McLaren drivers.