yawn.
yawn.

Back and forth was happening because drivers were unused to the energy usage and thus handled it like a bull in a china shop. Use up too much to get ahead and then lose out on next straight. As predicted, they learned to do this better and make overtakes stick more often. But you still get energy use opening up opportunities (example Hadjar today)AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 20:43The only reason that the first races had back and forth is because Mercedes was the fastest car, had bad starts, and then had the pace to pass everyone. Now that Mercedes is no longer the fastest car, that cheap plot is dead.
Mclaren has the fastest car, and they also have good starts. No more cheap plot for F1. It has nothing to do with the regs changes. There was plenty of dueling behind the leaders. Hamilton vs Verstappen. Russell vs Antonelli. Hadjar vs Colapinto. Alonso vs Stroll and the Cadillacs. The group behind the Alpines.
With these reg changes, drivers can push more and the stronger drivers are putting distance between themselves and their weaker teammates. Exactly how F1 should be. Sport comes first.
I agree on that first point too. Nothing that is happening now is particularly surprising, and it's kneejerk to blame it on the tweaks to the regulations.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 21:10Back and forth was happening because drivers were unused to the energy usage and thus handled it like a bull in a china shop. Use up too much to get ahead and then lose out on next straight. As predicted, they learned to do this better and make overtakes stick more often. But you still get energy use opening up opportunities (example Hadjar today)AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 20:43The only reason that the first races had back and forth is because Mercedes was the fastest car, had bad starts, and then had the pace to pass everyone. Now that Mercedes is no longer the fastest car, that cheap plot is dead.
Mclaren has the fastest car, and they also have good starts. No more cheap plot for F1. It has nothing to do with the regs changes. There was plenty of dueling behind the leaders. Hamilton vs Verstappen. Russell vs Antonelli. Hadjar vs Colapinto. Alonso vs Stroll and the Cadillacs. The group behind the Alpines.
With these reg changes, drivers can push more and the stronger drivers are putting distance between themselves and their weaker teammates. Exactly how F1 should be. Sport comes first.
Ofcourse if cars are in order of pace after T1 you probably won't get a lot of overtaking.