Interesting, I thought the somewhat thinner air would need teams to run a higher load?
It's a minor issue compared to mexico.

https://www.racefans.net/2025/11/06/ver ... advantage/“In the rain it’s always very risky,” Verstappen told the official Formula 1 channel. “It can work for you, it can work against you.
“Also this season I think in the wet McLaren has been very, very strong to control the overheating, for example, on the intermediate tyres. So it’s not a given that if it rains that suddenly we will be the ones to beat.”
Did he dominate 2024? He was good, but he won, pretty much because of the red flag didn't he?venkyhere wrote: ↑05 Nov 2025, 17:42I wouldn't go so far as to say 'miles ahead' , because Mexico was so severe on cooling requirements, that McLaren enjoyed a 'double whammy' advantage - less openings on engine cover => less 'bad air' hitting the rear DF structures, better 'efficiency in downforce generation' => amplifying the alread big tyre life advantage even more, on top of 'less drag'. Plus Norris has unlocked a new way to 'setup the car to his liking' which he exploited to the hilt.selvam_e2002 wrote: ↑05 Nov 2025, 17:06if no rain, McLean miles ahead for the rest of the field like Mexcio ....
McLaren were 'miles ahead' before the summer break, when Redbull were struggling to setup the car, Mercedes didn't have their front wing fix, Ferrari were completely lost etc. All three teams have found 'fixes' (to different extents) after the summer break. So for the rest of the races, I would say McLaren are 'ahead' and might end up winning everything, but not expecting 'mega car advantage'.
Also, may I add, that all cars are different from 2024, so expecting Verstappen to 'dominate' like 2024, in case the race is wet, is not a given. So whether wet or dry, Mclaren winning all 4 races (even Vegas) is a definite possibility.
He was on average 1s per lap faster with same tyre age. If you think all the 1s came from clear visibility and clean air, well I guess your thoughts are aligned with Norris "it's all luck, not talent"... and no matter what anyone says, is going to change your opinion. Good for you.
He did well, but, I don't think he wins without the red flag. Lando had stopped, then passed Russell. And was not far off.venkyhere wrote: ↑07 Nov 2025, 09:59He was on average 1s per lap faster with same tyre age. If you think all the 1s came from clear visibility and clean air, well I guess your thoughts are aligned with Norris "it's all luck, not talent"... and no matter what anyone says, is going to change your opinion. Good for you.
You've apparently forgotten that Verstappen couldn't pass Leclerc for 13 laps in the dirty air, and only managed to pass him when Charles pitted. And yes, the red flag gave Verstappen around 30 seconds and clean air. It's foolish to deny the obvious.venkyhere wrote: ↑07 Nov 2025, 09:59He was on average 1s per lap faster with same tyre age. If you think all the 1s came from clear visibility and clean air, well I guess your thoughts are aligned with Norris "it's all luck, not talent"... and no matter what anyone says, is going to change your opinion. Good for you.
._cerber1 wrote: ↑07 Nov 2025, 11:32You've apparently forgotten that Verstappen couldn't pass Leclerc for 13 laps in the dirty air, and only managed to pass him when Charles pitted. And yes, the red flag gave Verstappen around 30 seconds and clean air. It's foolish to deny the obvious.venkyhere wrote: ↑07 Nov 2025, 09:59He was on average 1s per lap faster with same tyre age. If you think all the 1s came from clear visibility and clean air, well I guess your thoughts are aligned with Norris "it's all luck, not talent"... and no matter what anyone says, is going to change your opinion. Good for you.


I just find it hard that sometimes people struggle to accept luck can play a part.Farnborough wrote: ↑07 Nov 2025, 12:41Thats the thing about those pesky world champions .... damned lucky chaps, all of them.
All of the time, in every eventuality![]()