Enjoyed the race.
Im still unsure if Oscar wins, Russell on hards may have been a tough prospect.
Good to see the car in the mix though.
Things are starting to settle now. The gap to Merc isn't as big as portrayed and if the Miami upgrade is a good one, we may well be the lead car.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 10:26Starting from Miami we should do everything we can to turn things around.
We shouldn't be too optimistic as you can never know, but the team seems to think highly of their chances of fighting for wins throughout the year. They seemed to have good understanding of development pace in previous years so hopefully they are not wrong.mwillems wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 13:10Things are starting to settle now. The gap to Merc isn't as big as portrayed and if the Miami upgrade is a good one, we may well be the lead car.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 10:26Starting from Miami we should do everything we can to turn things around.
The Mclaren will continue to find not insubstantial time from the engine though the gains are dminishing.
What will be telling is just how much we bring. Feels like we've been working on this next package for longer than others, but that doesn't mean we understanding these regs as well as others, yet.
We certainly can't expect, but I have purposefully stayed away because most of the ideas being spouted about the car and it's pace looked really wrong, and the idea we could read into the pace in the same way we used to, looks wrong.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 13:19We shouldn't be too optimistic as you can never know, but the team seems to think highly of their chances of fighting for wins throughout the year. They seemed to have good understanding of development pace in previous years so hopefully they are not wrong.mwillems wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 13:10Things are starting to settle now. The gap to Merc isn't as big as portrayed and if the Miami upgrade is a good one, we may well be the lead car.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 10:26Starting from Miami we should do everything we can to turn things around.
The Mclaren will continue to find not insubstantial time from the engine though the gains are dminishing.
What will be telling is just how much we bring. Feels like we've been working on this next package for longer than others, but that doesn't mean we understanding these regs as well as others, yet.
Pretty impressive stuff from a "customer" team.
I would hardly call this weekend trouble free, lol. Norris barely got any laps in during practice at all because of all the problems.
“Honestly some of the racing, I didn't even want to overtake Lewis. It's just that my battery deploys, I don't want it to deploy, but I can't control it,” Norris said when asked by Motorsport.com.
“So, I overtake him, and then I have no battery left, so he just flies past. This is not racing, this is yo-yoing. Even though he [Hamilton] says it's not, it is yo-yoing.” “When you're just at the mercy of whatever the power unit delivers, the driver should be in control of it at least, and we're not.”
Well, the problem is, it deploys into 130R. I have to lift, otherwise I'll drive into him, and then I'm not allowed to go back on throttle. If I go on throttle, my battery deploys, and I don't want it to deploy because it should have cut. But because you lift and you have to go back on [throttle], it redeploys.
I have to disagree with you on this one… Track position was king in Japan… It was extremely hard to overtake even with a car with a big pace delta… Ensuring that Piastri was ahead of Russell was the right move considering that and the fact that Piastri was already P1… If Piastri loses track position to Russell because of an undercut, Russell finishes way ahead of PiastriBMMR61 wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 08:58Randy Singh strikes again. Yeah what was the strategy behind pitting early when maintaining strong pace (especially Oscar)??? Being undercut wasn't a valid reason. The risk of a safety car, which happened, would scupper any possible reason. Getting into clean air? Having to get past Max and Pierre is never a nice clean slam dunk. Come on McLaren strategy team. When is Courtenay going to finish gardening leave and kick the essential ass to be a professional outfit in every department. Great work Oscar, something out of nothing.
I can't work out your reasoning, after (rightly) saying "track position was king". Oscar gave away track position after marginally extending on Russell to almost 2.0 seconds. They 'pitted him into a gap' - immediately behind Verstappen and Gasly, two of the drivers you would least want to overtake even with a pace advantage! Even with the benefit of hindsight, giving away a 2.0 second lead is something that pre-2025 Red Bull would never do. For a 1-stop race pitting at 1/3 race distance is in itself risky, especially given they hadn't done long running on the hard tyre. Finally - there were no undercuts at Suzuka 2026, zero. I've looked at the official lap times and the hard tyres took 2 laps to "come in". To reinforce this fact and negate any ideas of undercut, McLaren should have seen that Lando was well short of undercutting Charles, well short, why would Oscar have any worry of Charles? Shades of similar horrendous tactics for Oscar to undercut Charles at Budapest last year that cost him a win??? Undercuts shouldn't be hit and hope, but assessed on observable facts.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 16:43I have to disagree with you on this one… Track position was king in Japan… It was extremely hard to overtake even with a car with a big pace delta… Ensuring that Piastri was ahead of Russell was the right move considering that and the fact that Piastri was already P1… If Piastri loses track position to Russell because of an undercut, Russell finishes way ahead of PiastriBMMR61 wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 08:58Randy Singh strikes again. Yeah what was the strategy behind pitting early when maintaining strong pace (especially Oscar)??? Being undercut wasn't a valid reason. The risk of a safety car, which happened, would scupper any possible reason. Getting into clean air? Having to get past Max and Pierre is never a nice clean slam dunk. Come on McLaren strategy team. When is Courtenay going to finish gardening leave and kick the essential ass to be a professional outfit in every department. Great work Oscar, something out of nothing.
Got to continue to be refreshed by Andrea's honesty and realism.