AR3-GP wrote: ↑10 Nov 2025, 22:01
CjC wrote: ↑10 Nov 2025, 21:56
So McLaren can’t be concerned when they have a 49 point gap to someone who also on their day can be the fastest package on the grid.
Lando Norris won Mexico with 30 seconds, was fastest in the race in COTA, and could have put another 10 seconds on the field in Brazil.
There is no indication that Red Bull is the fastest package anywhere.
Mclaren's fight is not with Red Bull. Lando no longer has to win races. He can simply finish on the podium which is something that he has managed the most of any Mclaren driver in history already.
I don't get these statements honestly. All McLaren critics complain that McLaren/Lando downplays the car too much and then you go and make statements like these which are exactly the same but from the other way around. Why don't you recognize that RedBull did a good job and turned the car around? They somehow messed up Brazil preparation catastrophically, but evidently the car still wasn't bad. It had the fastest race pace. And you can't go ahead and negate that while claiming that McLaren had the fastest car in Austin because Lando had the fastest race pace
Now for RedBull, they were the fastest in Monza. Comfortably at that. Max had a very comfortable Baku win as well, in part because of a big McLaren fumble, but it's not like they were looking favorites for pole before the mess that was Q3. And the pace in the race was nothing special from Lando either. Not much can be said about Mexico. Lando had it completely covered. Unlikely anyone would have touched him. But again, it's not like RedBull had a dumpster of a car. It was the second fastest car come race day. It just looked bad that first stint because mediums were sh*t and Max got caught up in shenanigans.
And now coming to Brazil, the 10s was hardly impressive. If anything, it showed that McLaren were not as fast as they probably expected after Mexico.
But what puzzles me is all these people who claim "ah but Lando could have easily pulled another 10s out of his ass". I mean on what account is that assessment made? The guy literally said he was pushing and the first thing he said after the race was that he was not happy with the 10s gap either. The guy was pushing man, that was the pace, that's the gap he could pull. There wasn't another 10 second in it.
Lando had an easy race. Clean air all the time with the exception of half a lap spent behind Max. If anything, he actually lost ground to Max throughout the race. The grid spread from P1-P20 is probably more than 10 seconds. For Max to finish within that at the end while having to go through traffic on top of that just goes to show that McLaren didn't have a car that was guaranteed a cruise to victory had RedBull nailed the setup from the get go and started higher up.
And you can twist it however you want and say that's the driver's problem and not the car's problem, because I can see it coming. In any case, even if you believe that to be true, it's irrelevant. The car is as fast as the best driver can drive it. So I don't know how one evaluates this "invisible potential". Lando was the best McLaren driver in Brazil and he had worse race pace than a severely handicapped Max.
Now we are heading into Las Vegas, which if history is to be taken into consideration, there is a high likelihood Lando will drop a lot of points to Max. All you need is a DNF to happen after that (which sometimes its not really in your control) and suddenly Abu Dhabi becomes crucial just like it was last year. And it's not like any of the upcoming tracks are not good RedBull tracks. If McLaren is not winning them, RedBull/Max will.
Is Max the favourite for the championship? No, not really. Don't think anyone can say that with a straight face. But let's not pretend like it's totally out of the realm of possibilities. He will need luck, and a lot of it (or a mega fumble by Lando, for 3 weekends straight), but he is still in it. And until he is no longer in it, he should be considered a threat. You would be a naive team if you ignored Max Verstappen.