What is he to get a grip of, he is just pointing out the hypocrisy of some people's posts over the last 48 hours or so.
What is he to get a grip of, he is just pointing out the hypocrisy of some people's posts over the last 48 hours or so.
It’s always really cool to be onboard with Lewis in battles, to see how he places the car to avoid the dirty air, either slightly tighter than the racing line or slightly wider. He tried all combos against Fernando, but the Alpine was quite good out of the last corner.Phil wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 15:22I find it a bit rich that Alonso seems to know how Lewis should have been driving those last few corners. He has zero know-how on how the Mercedes corners when following his car. Lewis is known for taking different lines when following drivers on such a track precisely to reduce the dirty air and the effect it has on the frontend of his car.
Considering Hamilton got pole and knows how to maximize laptime on this track, i find it laughable to suggest he was making mistakes in that sector. He was driving those corners differently and due to the effect of the dirty air.
Add to that Lewis condition wich IMHO is the reason he was making small mistakes in last corner cementing Alonso´s defence.
Alonso replied that for you just after the race for the spanish tv. He said Lewis should have pass him as fast as he did with Sainz, but he was making small mistakes in last corner and that was the reason he needed so many laps.ringo wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 14:10Okay then if what you are saying is true.. Then why did not Lewis have enough pace to be on Alonso's gearbox on the end of straight?Andres125sx wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 08:10So a Mercedes with 5 laps old medium tires does not have enough tire advantage versus an Alpine with 15 laps old hard tires? Sorry but this is BS, that is a huge tire advantage even without considering the car advantage wich adds to this.ringo wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 04:28
Alonso and Hamilton to me is the true heir after shumacher. I rate both at the highest level. But as much as Lewis downplays his tyre wear and plays mind games Alonso also hypes himself and plays mind games. Theyre two sides to the same coin. He did a very great job defending but he knows its not puzzling why Lewis could not pass. They tyre advantage was not big enough. Second Alonso knows why he lost the championship in 2010. He could not overtake A Vitaly Petrov in a much much slower car in Abudahbi, an easier place to overtake.
Alonso is very good. supreme car control and unrelenting time attack skills. But his own hype is something that's hard for him to resist. I do not mind, i enjoy his sense of motivation and humour. But his defense was not an impossible defense.
The most impossible in recent memory is the duel in the desert with Lewis on old slower tyres and Nico on fresher tyres.
True, why am I talking sense! Where is this 3 second per lap faster Max coming from? Because Mick was being overtaken by other cars and he was getting compromised. He put a brave front against Max, but couldn't do so against Gasly and Hamilton. Sense? Hell of a job there from Max, with a broken and unpredictable car to make such good moves!ringo wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 14:12Why are you talking sense?e30ernest wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 10:45Well by that metric, Verstappen should have passed Mick much much earlier too given how much pace advantage the Red Bull had over the Haas even with the damage to his car. After a lap and a half from his pass he was already 3+ secs ahead of Mick.Ryar wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 10:22Comparison with Monaco is deceiving. Despite all that explanation, around 2 seconds advantage (I couldn't find a quote from Sky when they mentioned this) is all that is needed to pass a car in Hungaroring. That Mercedes car at that stage, had more than enough, accounting for both car's pace advantage plus tyres.
Verstappen doesnt make mistakes!!
Let's ask the legendary Mick how he was able to keep a 3 second per lap faster Max behind.
Schumacher/Verstappen would have sounded Benetton.
Ah, the old combustible Benetton days...
Not really. They could/should arguably have been DSQd for modifying the filter and that's before the traction and launch control (but they never used it, honest) saga.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 20:56Ah, the old combustible Benetton days...
https://media.nu.nl/m/qsqxa1oa9zim_wd12 ... ule-1.jpg
Back when abusing the rules had real consequences.
The fire was a consequence of their actions. That they weren't thrown out by the FIA is a different matter. What was shocking was that it came in the same year that two drivers died. It was almost as if the FIA didn't want yet another issue.jjn9128 wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 21:28Not really. They could/should arguably have been DSQd for modifying the filter and that's before the traction and launch control (but they never used it, honest) saga.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 20:56Ah, the old combustible Benetton days...
https://media.nu.nl/m/qsqxa1oa9zim_wd12 ... ule-1.jpg
Back when abusing the rules had real consequences.
As Phil said, Alonso is just being a bit rich. He does not know what was happening in Lewis car or how Lewis was driving. There were no mistakes. Get over it.Andres125sx wrote: ↑04 Aug 2021, 16:51
Alonso replied that for you just after the race for the spanish tv. He said Lewis should have pass him as fast as he did with Sainz, but he was making small mistakes in last corner and that was the reason he needed so many laps.
Obviously he was another reason himself, but at 40 Alonso is a lot more humble than he used to be. Better late than never
Lap 50 to lap 60, when Verstappen was on 20 lap younger tyres than a season-long struggling Riccardo who was also driving a damaged car? Verstappen passed Ricciardo and, by the end of the lap, was 2.8 clear. By lap 66 he was over 22 seconds clear.
OK, I accept perhaps I should have added a conditional phrase as well.
I see no need for excuses, this is what racing is supposed to be. Places have to be fought for, not zoom up and fly past, that's just driving the quickest car. I also feel, for the same reason, blue flags are far too restrictive. Lapped cars should not hold up leaders unduly, but he 'jump out the way when you are 3 seconds infront' is just spoiling the spectacle for us and the race for any car that is not in the to p3. Notice that when a tail ender starts out of position they 'hold their own' for quite a long while. Not because they are faster than normal, but because they can take the same line as the leaders.Michelangelo wrote: ↑05 Aug 2021, 00:26Every Lewis fan is trying to find something that praises Lewis rather than accepting that he couldn't pass Alonso for like 10 laps. Alonso defended well BUT he cracked under pressure. Alonso defended well BUT tyre advantage wasn't that big etc. Hamilton had a faster car and couldn't overtake Fernando. That's it.
And for the Abu Dhabi 2010 example, DRS wasn't a thing back then and that Renault stormed out of slow corners with a traction and had respectable straight line speed. Alonso didn't lose the title because he couldn't overtake. He lost it because of Ferrari's horrible strategy decision. If DRS wasn't a thing, Lewis wouldn't have a chance to pass him.