1. they promised him the racing car which he wins a GP with
![Image](https://i.imgur.com/ZqnzQ71.jpg)
2. among others, a one off fee for a GP win
![Image](https://i.imgur.com/wBc4Hrz.jpg)
3. being in the Netflix show "drive to survive" and being ambassador of Huawei
![Image](https://i.imgur.com/iopPH48.jpg)
sorry coudn't get them smaller somehow
It was 1.7s against Ferrari in Spa Q3 vs over 2s in 2018 in Q1 (Q1 elimination)
The car is not bad on medium and high DF tracks. It obviously likes straight lines but it's good/decent on most types of turns.Jambier wrote: ↑03 Sep 2019, 16:30The Renault is a bit like the Ferrari: Strong on low downforce track.
I expect this again in Monza then struggle again.
So they are proud to be close to Red Bull on track like this, but rest of the time they are extremely slow
And I expect Racing Point with their evolution to be ahead soon, despite a weaker line up
An excellent analysis from Abiteboul:Neno wrote: ↑09 Sep 2019, 01:14This kind of results should have being a norm, not exceptions. And that's frustrating. This car in reality works on 3 tracks out 21. That means Renault build a car which 14% of time works every time. Yes I am alluding to movie Anchorman here. And sadly Enstone and their group in charge of car design and development really feels like that.
https://au.motorsport.com/f1/news/renau ... t/4535229/Just like we knew a good result was available here, because we know the car has a good top speed, and we know the car is extremely competitive in slow corners, which is a little bit the situation here. There are a couple of medium to high-speed corners, but you are not losing a lot of time here when you are not competitive. We still know where our weakness and strengths are and we need to work on that harder.
Great stuff and a great result!I think this track obviously suits us or hides our weakness maybe more and brings forward the good side of our power unit. I think that's the reason we are competitive this weekend.
Remember the Williams from 2014? It was a skiddy car through straights and fully utilized the Mercedes power.
Renault ousted Nico Hulkenberg because he is too "pessimistic" and "negative".
That is the claim of Renault advisor and F1 legend Alain Prost, as he explained why the French works team has instead signed up fellow Frenchman Esteban Ocon for 2020.
"We don't want pessimistic drivers, which is why we opted for Ocon," Prost told Sky Italia.