dans79 wrote:It's pretty much never been possible to go flat out for an entire race, in pretty much any racing series. Drivers have always had to manage the engine, or the tires, fuel load or some other arbitrary parameter.
Very true. Even in Nascar which is one of the simplest forms of racing, tire management is what wins races.
I guess every driver of every era and racing series is continuously busy with the state of his car, tyres, engine, fuel load, brake temperatures etc, and acting on that (management).
But past drivers would simply adapt their driving style based on experience and (gut) feeling. 30 years back it would not make sense to ask the wall about the state of your tires, because they would have even less information than you, since the only relevant sensor was your butt.
Now the car is hooked up to so many sensors that this managing becomes more and more a conversation between the pit wall and the driver. That makes it visible, and sometimes annoyingly so.
MOGOW wrote:It does in the parallel universe of Formula One where "racing" is no longer defined as "going as fast as possible for as long as possible" but rather as" managing a number of arbitrarily imposed external factors better than anyone else".
Actually I think it may be the other way around. Fangio had to manage the tires, brakes, fuel etc without a radio. A modern F1 driver has about a complete overseas technical team hooked up to his car via broadband connection.
The modern driver does not necessarely have to be worse on car management, but he sure has a lot more help on top of his natural skillset.