Probably McLaren's last chance this year to steal a podium
Singapore has the second slowest average lap time of the season (after Monaco), I don’t see how a car which has struggled in slow corners all season can be expected to compete near the front without a huge slice of luck or half a dozen retirements from front running cars.
If it’s a matter of “stealing” a podium... There could be a few more chances down the road... There will probably be more penalties for Renault and RBR and we’ve seeing so far that a lot can happen during a race... I wouldn’t bank on it though
5th on pace in Hungary doesn't exactly scream "struggling in slow corners" tbhJackles-UK wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 18:05Singapore has the second slowest average lap time of the season (after Monaco), I don’t see how a car which has struggled in slow corners all season can be expected to compete near the front without a huge slice of luck or half a dozen retirements from front running cars.
Kimi said that Alfa was just as fast, if not faster than mclaren so maybe not ‘clearly’
I would say that hey struggle in slow corners on the tracks that have a fast slow combination, or something like that. If the track would be only slow (like Monaco) they would be probably fine, if it was only super fast, like an oval as well, but when both extremes are combined they cant set the car to be best in all types of corners, so they bleed time.Marc.W wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 18:435th on pace in Hungary doesn't exactly scream "struggling in slow corners" tbhJackles-UK wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 18:05Singapore has the second slowest average lap time of the season (after Monaco), I don’t see how a car which has struggled in slow corners all season can be expected to compete near the front without a huge slice of luck or half a dozen retirements from front running cars.
Car did very well in tracks with predominantly low to mid speed corners though. It was the fastest car in the midfield in Hungary, and Sainz does very well here. It's like the start of the season all over again, they start off slow, and finish strong. At least Norris salvaged a point, and shows there was some pace in the car. Pity for Carlos, it must be frustrating to end up like that, now he knows how Norris felt last race. Well I'm sure McLaren will bounce back.Jackles-UK wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 18:05Singapore has the second slowest average lap time of the season (after Monaco), I don’t see how a car which has struggled in slow corners all season can be expected to compete near the front without a huge slice of luck or half a dozen retirements from front running cars.
https://www.mclaren.com/racing/2019/ita ... rand-prix/We don’t have a tailored low-downforce package but the team has worked very hard with the tools they had available, and in both events we could’ve scored good points.
which brings me back to my earlier statement, somewhere last week Rank 4 in WCC isn't secure at allM840TR wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 20:29Seidl:
https://www.mclaren.com/racing/2019/ita ... rand-prix/We don’t have a tailored low-downforce package but the team has worked very hard with the tools they had available, and in both events we could’ve scored good points.
Totally agreed. Good thing there aren't any more low-df tracks coming up then .Capharol wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 20:40which brings me back to my earlier statement, somewhere last week Rank 4 in WCC isn't secure at allM840TR wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 20:29Seidl:
https://www.mclaren.com/racing/2019/ita ... rand-prix/We don’t have a tailored low-downforce package but the team has worked very hard with the tools they had available, and in both events we could’ve scored good points.
Sorry, I meant Sainz 5th fastest on track, not team
I’m still not convinced for Singapore but we should still be comfortably ahead of the Renault which is definitely lacking high-downforce performance more so than the McLaren. However, the rest of the races in the season run-in after that (Russia, Japan, USA, Mexico, Brazil & Abu Dhabi) are all tracks which should suit this chassis so I’m still pretty upbeat.godlameroso wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 20:24Car did very well in tracks with predominantly low to mid speed corners though. It was the fastest car in the midfield in Hungary, and Sainz does very well here. It's like the start of the season all over again, they start off slow, and finish strong. At least Norris salvaged a point, and shows there was some pace in the car. Pity for Carlos, it must be frustrating to end up like that, now he knows how Norris felt last race. Well I'm sure McLaren will bounce back.Jackles-UK wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 18:05Singapore has the second slowest average lap time of the season (after Monaco), I don’t see how a car which has struggled in slow corners all season can be expected to compete near the front without a huge slice of luck or half a dozen retirements from front running cars.
Still think it's prety secure ... We've just gone through the worst case senario over the last 2 weekends and we still have a 18 point lead. Both Races show we had good pace to haul in good points had we executed. We''ll not go on "not exectuting" indefinately.Capharol wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 20:40which brings me back to my earlier statement, somewhere last week Rank 4 in WCC isn't secure at allM840TR wrote: ↑08 Sep 2019, 20:29Seidl:
https://www.mclaren.com/racing/2019/ita ... rand-prix/We don’t have a tailored low-downforce package but the team has worked very hard with the tools they had available, and in both events we could’ve scored good points.