Exactly When dominant, equality suddenly seems unfair. Had Perez beat a Merc I would admit they are quicker here.Pyrone89 wrote: ↑27 Jun 2021, 01:06How do you know?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑27 Jun 2021, 00:57Wrong. No driver can produce more lap time than the car is able to produce. The best drivers get closer to the car's limits. If Max is doing a lap time, then it shows the car is able to do that time. Indeed, it's actually able to do more than that as no human can drive an F1 car at 100% of it potential.grubschumi13 wrote: ↑26 Jun 2021, 23:35
All last year we heard Brundle say "Thank God for Max Verstappen" for hanging onto the Mercs in a vastly inferior car. Despite his car's inferiority he challenged Bottas only finishing 9 points behind Bottas in the all conquering w11.
Now RBR have managed to get a just a little bit more closer to Mercedes, just enough for Max's talent to now match and Hamilton's Mercedes.
If it were Albon and Perez in RBR we would be talking about how Mercedes has dominated for another year. RBR's car is inferior and it is Max making the difference week in week out.
Max might be better than Lewis but the Red Bull is better than the Mercedes on this track on this day.
If Perez was ahead of the Mercs I would say yes, but that is not the case.
Perhaps the dominance + underdog talk of Mercedes in all these years people have a shifted paradigm of competitiveness. They seem to only view Mercedes as strongest when they are utterly dominant, when it is actually close they label the Merc as the weaker car just because they are so used to seeing dominant cars of them.
Both Mercs are qualifying top 3 in 5 of the 8 races so far. RBR in only 1 of 8 races have they been top 3.
So far this season Merc have been the stronger car in the race. Since the first race of this season all the races have been exciting both in on tract action and strategy. It is very competitive and Max is the difference. Everyone knows this.