In 2004 Honda switched to Michelin and had their best season straight away. For sure the '04 Honda was their best car, and even their '03 winter testing "concept car" was setting lap records which caused skeptics to accuse then of running without ballast. But when the season began in earnest they took to the new Michelins like a duck to water. And Michelin did not enjoy any signifigant advantage at that time like they did in the pre-Monza (Michelin-gate) summer of '03, nor was it like the race distance tyre advantage that Michelin enjoyed in '05. In fact Ferrari won more races that year on Bridgestones than they ever did, their superior F2004 notwithstanding.
And let us not forget that Williams won in only their fourth race on Michelins at Imola in 2001.
Having said all that, is all this "Bridgestone tyre advantage" talk real or is it just press hype? For sure the former Michelin teams have some adapting to do, but isn't it something that will be well behind them even by the end of January? And even Ferrari, Toyota, Williams et. al. will have some adapting to harder slippery "spec" tyres. Most of the adapting will have to do, I imagine, with carcass construction and rebound characteristics, weight etc. and didn't the teams constantly experiment with varieties during the tyre war?
I think some teams are letting the press do their dirty work by down-playing expectations. Especially BMW which otherwise should be expected to join the fray for a dozen or so podiums which is less than 25% of 3X18.
In a more candid moment, Pat Symonds said that it is to the teams advantage to have a constant tyre spec that they can fine tune the car to the tyre rather than introducing the endless variables that result from constant tyre experimentation. Mind you I think that tyre wars are great and that the FIA treated Michelin unjustly (a mild term for: "shabbily, like the b@$tards they are").
So is this tyre talk all hype or is there something to it? Remember Williams at Imola and Honda in '04.