Of course, but he can't outrun a superior car.

Monza is a special case, because the 'base-downforce' level is very low, which is a Mclaren weakness and Redbull strength. However, Qatar is a track with base-downforce much greater than Monza. The 'efficiency/performance' of the floor/wings etc will shift. IMHO, we cannot consider parabolica as proof of concept. That's why I chose Austin to make the comparison (there too it was the Monza floor) in my earlier post, because the base-downforce level in COTA is high.
The gap is very small in high speed corners but it does exist, how much of that is the car and how much is Verstappen we'll never know, RB21 was slightly faster in COTA high speed section than MCL39. MCL39 and RB21 are now very close in qualy across almost all corner speeds and profiles, with MCL39 perhaps having only a sizeable advantage in long corners and RB21 being 2-3 kmph faster on end of straights.venkyhere wrote: ↑24 Nov 2025, 11:16Of course, but he can't outrun a superior car.
this is the Suzuka esses in Sector1 in 2025. (McL39 v RB21) :
https://i.ibb.co/7NLqKsPs/Mc-L39-RB21-suzuka.png
We tend to forget how spectacular the McL39 is, in all types of corners. Yes, the RB20 had one trump card over the McL38 - high speed corners (that's why Max got pole in Qatar in 2024), but not the case with the 2025 cars. The McL39 has no weakness, in no corner type is it weaker than the Redbull. As the above pic shows, it's actually better in high speed corners.
I think McL38 was super good at Qatar. Compare Oscar and Lando's laps and they didn't lack at all in high-speed. Their drivers cant put a good lap together.venkyhere wrote: ↑24 Nov 2025, 11:16Of course, but he can't outrun a superior car.
this is the Suzuka esses in Sector1 in 2025. (McL39 v RB21) :
https://i.ibb.co/7NLqKsPs/Mc-L39-RB21-suzuka.png
We tend to forget how spectacular the McL39 is, in all types of corners. Yes, the RB20 had one trump card over the McL38 - high speed corners (that's why Max got pole in Qatar in 2024), but not the case with the 2025 cars. The McL39 has no weakness, in no corner type is it weaker than the Redbull. As the above pic shows, it's actually better in high speed corners.
That is I think my biggest concern too. Race to race seems a bit of a lottery and their seems a bit disconnect between the Sim and track.venkyhere wrote: ↑24 Nov 2025, 13:42Hmm... with Redbull, the main weakness is that their simulators back in the factory that's used to arrive at the base-setup is utterly unreliable. The correlation is so bad, that putting the car in the right window for a track is a lottery - they can get it right with just FP1 alone on a sprint weekend like Austin (even there it wasn't perfect), and they can get it wrong even after a sprint race (which is a better 'test' of a setup than FP) collected data, on their second attempt, like it happened in Brazil. So yes, we should think Qatar will be a 'lottery' weekend.
https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... UItiMc4rKUSo it seems like lately we've been able to improve our quali pace, but our race pace has taken a bit of a hit. Even when you look at Brazil—our quali pace was very strong, but Max was still a little faster in the race. Similar this weekend—we were very, very good yesterday, like incredibly strong yesterday, but just not good enough today. So we'll see what's maybe changed over the last few weeks and what we can improve on for Qatar.