godlameroso wrote: ↑10 Aug 2020, 17:43
HPD wrote: ↑10 Aug 2020, 17:07
It amazes me how Max must fight 2 Mercedes at the same time (2 different strategy types) and still come out victorious.
2 vs 1 is very unfair and that makes Max victories special. (compared to other pilots(?)...
Red Bull needs another driver to pressure Mercedes.
I think what Verstappen is doing is more impressive than Alonso's runner up in 2012 because he at least had Massa helping him, plus McLaren was taking points away from Red Bull keeping Alonso in contention. This year Verstappen has split the Mercedes after 4 races and a DNF with just the team and himself. If the Red Bull takes a step on the chassis front and closes the gap to Mercedes it'll be game on. To win the championship with a slower car, against two Mercedes is no small feat when one of the Mercedes drivers is a generational talent. It would cement Verstappen as one of the greatest drivers, Red Bull as one of the greatest teams in F1 history, and powered by Honda.
This season sort of reminds me of the tortoise and the hare, Red Bull is just steady, not faster than Mercedes, but very steady. Mercedes is very fast in short bursts, but cannot sustain that kind of pace for long.
I don't agree with that. Most of the time the Mercedes are so far out front, they are just cruising. No need to go faster than you need to.
Mercedes has won every single race so far on pace. Max has gotten two runner up finishes at the expense of Valteri 1) making a mistake (jump the start) 2) tire exploding.
Red Bull knows they don't have the pace, so it's coming down to creative strategy calls. This week the FIA, imo, directed Pirelli to make it more interesting via the tire compounds. This screams WWE wrestling / NASCAR, but good for Redbull for building a car that doesn't eat tires and everyone was dealt the same hand. However, other than this weekend, Max would have had third places if it wasn't for Valteri's misfortunes, including the weekend Max blew up.