Use the report button to flag up trolling / off topic comments to the mods. Then they can remove the offending stuff and nip it in the bud.Gettingonabit wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 09:51Just use the ignore button, it makes this forum much cleaner.
Use the report button to flag up trolling / off topic comments to the mods. Then they can remove the offending stuff and nip it in the bud.Gettingonabit wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 09:51Just use the ignore button, it makes this forum much cleaner.
Vettel didn't blow any chance in the race. He started 4th and 2nd was the best he could have achieved after the failed pit stop, which he eventually did.gdanielwesley wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 09:49Vettel's mentally in a negative space, he knows he had his chance and blew it. He has not been able to put pressure on Lewis this race where Mercedes was not expected to be competitive, it was the other way round that vettel was under pressure, made that risky move on Bottas. Mercedes is going to be strong in the later part of the season and Ferrari don't have the car for twisty Singapore. Ferrari's spec 3 engine didn't look that special with Haas ..even if they show good pace in Monza and spa..unless Lewis has a dnf it is going to be incredibly difficult to bounce back from here...NathanOlder wrote:
Vettel needs to outscore Hamilton in Spa/Monza otherwise I feel his head will drop.
Unless it rains.f1316 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 10:30I feel like, over the course of this half of the season, Ferrari have dropped the ball more than Mercedes but that we mustn’t also forget Mercedes’ own mistakes.
- Australia and Austria were the big two races that slipped through their fingers, but arguably Silverstone as well, given they started from pole. Lots of dropped points for Bottas that they can feel aggrieved about and both teams will likely claim China as one they ‘should’ have won
- but Ferrari certainly has more: China, Baku, Germany and Hungary were all guilt-edged chances and, given Mercedes’ issues in Austria, they’ll also feel they should have done more to capitalise but for a silly mistake in Qualifying
Nevertheless, what this shows is how easy it is to make mistakes when things are so finely poised and that both teams have can easily outscore the other based on minuscule margins.
My view is that, pending balance shifting updates, the difference this year is that the majority of upcoming races will favour Ferrari - Spa, Monza, Russia and Singapore should all be in their favour now, so if they execute the whole game could flip on its head.
Vettel blew it big time on saturdayLM10 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 10:08Vettel didn't blow any chance in the race. He started 4th and 2nd was the best he could have achieved after the failed pit stop, which he eventually did.gdanielwesley wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 09:49Vettel's mentally in a negative space, he knows he had his chance and blew it. He has not been able to put pressure on Lewis this race where Mercedes was not expected to be competitive, it was the other way round that vettel was under pressure, made that risky move on Bottas. Mercedes is going to be strong in the later part of the season and Ferrari don't have the car for twisty Singapore. Ferrari's spec 3 engine didn't look that special with Haas ..even if they show good pace in Monza and spa..unless Lewis has a dnf it is going to be incredibly difficult to bounce back from here...NathanOlder wrote:
Vettel needs to outscore Hamilton in Spa/Monza otherwise I feel his head will drop.
Maybe you can explain me how you think Vettel should have put pressure on Lewis behind Bottas in Hungary.
Which could mean, that the car he had in all this races is very good in rain. I don't say that that is the case but in this discussion you people leave out the most possible solutions because it suits your favorite driver. If you have a neutral look on things there always are multiple explanations and the better car is even more possible than the theory that Hamilton is so much better in rain than every other driver. I think it is a mix of all that. Verstappen on Saturday showed that "a god in rain" (not from me, from some people here and the media) fails if the car is not good in rain or mixed conditions. It's all about the mix car and driver where the car has more of the part.bonjon1979 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 11:03Unless it rains.f1316 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 10:30I feel like, over the course of this half of the season, Ferrari have dropped the ball more than Mercedes but that we mustn’t also forget Mercedes’ own mistakes.
- Australia and Austria were the big two races that slipped through their fingers, but arguably Silverstone as well, given they started from pole. Lots of dropped points for Bottas that they can feel aggrieved about and both teams will likely claim China as one they ‘should’ have won
- but Ferrari certainly has more: China, Baku, Germany and Hungary were all guilt-edged chances and, given Mercedes’ issues in Austria, they’ll also feel they should have done more to capitalise but for a silly mistake in Qualifying
Nevertheless, what this shows is how easy it is to make mistakes when things are so finely poised and that both teams have can easily outscore the other based on minuscule margins.
My view is that, pending balance shifting updates, the difference this year is that the majority of upcoming races will favour Ferrari - Spa, Monza, Russia and Singapore should all be in their favour now, so if they execute the whole game could flip on its head.
People can argue all they like about who is the best driver in the wet but the facts speak for themselves. The last 9 wet races have all been won by the same driver. It’s not vettel
Ha, ok. The last time he didn’t win a race in the rain was 4 years ago in Hungary. We are told constantly that rain equalises things and the better drivers shine through. I think that even the most ardent anti-Hamilton fans would say that 9 out of 9 races in the wet, where we all know how easy it is to make a mistake is an extraordinary statistic.marvin78 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 11:07Which could mean, that the car he had in all this races is very good in rain. I don't say that that is the case but in this discussion you people leave out the most possible solutions because it suits your favorite driver. If you have a neutral look on things there always are multiple explanations and the better car is even more possible than the theory that Hamilton is so much better in rain than every other driver. I think it is a mix of all that. Verstappen on Saturday showed that "a god in rain" (not from me, from some people here and the media) fails if the car is not good in rain or mixed conditions. It's all about the mix car and driver where the car has more of the part.bonjon1979 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 11:03Unless it rains.f1316 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 10:30I feel like, over the course of this half of the season, Ferrari have dropped the ball more than Mercedes but that we mustn’t also forget Mercedes’ own mistakes.
- Australia and Austria were the big two races that slipped through their fingers, but arguably Silverstone as well, given they started from pole. Lots of dropped points for Bottas that they can feel aggrieved about and both teams will likely claim China as one they ‘should’ have won
- but Ferrari certainly has more: China, Baku, Germany and Hungary were all guilt-edged chances and, given Mercedes’ issues in Austria, they’ll also feel they should have done more to capitalise but for a silly mistake in Qualifying
Nevertheless, what this shows is how easy it is to make mistakes when things are so finely poised and that both teams have can easily outscore the other based on minuscule margins.
My view is that, pending balance shifting updates, the difference this year is that the majority of upcoming races will favour Ferrari - Spa, Monza, Russia and Singapore should all be in their favour now, so if they execute the whole game could flip on its head.
People can argue all they like about who is the best driver in the wet but the facts speak for themselves. The last 9 wet races have all been won by the same driver. It’s not vettel
If I remember the races correctly,f1316 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 10:30I feel like, over the course of this half of the season, Ferrari have dropped the ball more than Mercedes but that we mustn’t also forget Mercedes’ own mistakes.
- Australia and Austria were the big two races that slipped through their fingers, but arguably Silverstone as well, given they started from pole. Lots of dropped points for Bottas that they can feel aggrieved about and both teams will likely claim China as one they ‘should’ have won
- but Ferrari certainly has more: China, Baku, Germany and Hungary were all guilt-edged chances and, given Mercedes’ issues in Austria, they’ll also feel they should have done more to capitalise but for a silly mistake in Qualifying
Nevertheless, what this shows is how easy it is to make mistakes when things are so finely poised and that both teams have can easily outscore the other based on minuscule margins.
My view is that, pending balance shifting updates, the difference this year is that the majority of upcoming races will favour Ferrari - Spa, Monza, Russia and Singapore should all be in their favour now, so if they execute the whole game could flip on its head.
I never believed that rain equalizes things. I never did. That's a myth built by driver fans, I think. I might be wrong but I think I am not. It does not equalize, it moves some things.bonjon1979 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 11:10Ha, ok. The last time he didn’t win a race in the rain was 4 years ago in Hungary. We are told constantly that rain equalises things and the better drivers shine through. I think that even the most ardent anti-Hamilton fans would say that 9 out of 9 races in the wet, where we all know how easy it is to make a mistake is an extraordinary statistic.marvin78 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 11:07Which could mean, that the car he had in all this races is very good in rain. I don't say that that is the case but in this discussion you people leave out the most possible solutions because it suits your favorite driver. If you have a neutral look on things there always are multiple explanations and the better car is even more possible than the theory that Hamilton is so much better in rain than every other driver. I think it is a mix of all that. Verstappen on Saturday showed that "a god in rain" (not from me, from some people here and the media) fails if the car is not good in rain or mixed conditions. It's all about the mix car and driver where the car has more of the part.bonjon1979 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 11:03
Unless it rains.
People can argue all they like about who is the best driver in the wet but the facts speak for themselves. The last 9 wet races have all been won by the same driver. It’s not vettel
He isn't as good in wet as he's in dry. So what? How many times will people keep on mentioning it?NathanOlder wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 11:03Vettel blew it big time on saturdayLM10 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 10:08Vettel didn't blow any chance in the race. He started 4th and 2nd was the best he could have achieved after the failed pit stop, which he eventually did.gdanielwesley wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 09:49
Vettel's mentally in a negative space, he knows he had his chance and blew it. He has not been able to put pressure on Lewis this race where Mercedes was not expected to be competitive, it was the other way round that vettel was under pressure, made that risky move on Bottas. Mercedes is going to be strong in the later part of the season and Ferrari don't have the car for twisty Singapore. Ferrari's spec 3 engine didn't look that special with Haas ..even if they show good pace in Monza and spa..unless Lewis has a dnf it is going to be incredibly difficult to bounce back from here...
Maybe you can explain me how you think Vettel should have put pressure on Lewis behind Bottas in Hungary.