I honestly don't see the point why you would do this. I would agree if somehow all Mercedes teams were looking weak, but Mercedes did somewhat representative runs today. What does McLaren have to gain from sandbagging in this scenario? Other teams and especially Mercedes would be able to look past that bullsh*t and easily see how much McLaren are holding back. It seems rather pointless.f1isgood wrote: ↑13 Feb 2026, 19:01With energy recovery via braking, different drivers might create different perceptions of the car potential. Moreover you can now play with both ICE modes and energy deployment to a much bigger extent. IMO clearly McLaren haven't shown their hand. Likewise neither have the others. I think the race simulations will be good for understanding tire degradation but lap time differences themselves shouldn't matter.
EDIT : I think the only reason would be if they want to test the limits of the ICE so they're strategically deploying very little just to see how much they can recharge. For the record, I don't think they're going to be 1 second off the pace either, but Lando's run yesterday seemed a bit more realistic and he was still 2-3 tenths away from Leclerc at the last stint. Unfortunately live timing cut off so we have no idea what happened in the middle of the runs though.
