Are Ferrari sandbagging ??
Discussion
It would seem that Ferrari are under some kind of instruction not to blow away the field this year as they are doing just enough to win and slow enough to keep some of the field with them.
I mean imagine if what Trulli did had been dispatched by Schumacher inside a lap or two it would have been even a worse shellacking than it was.
They even screw up Rubens' pitstop and he cruises home and the Schu has a broken exhaust and sets the fastest lap !!!
So who is pulling the strings, Bernie or Luca ??
I mean imagine if what Trulli did had been dispatched by Schumacher inside a lap or two it would have been even a worse shellacking than it was.
They even screw up Rubens' pitstop and he cruises home and the Schu has a broken exhaust and sets the fastest lap !!!
So who is pulling the strings, Bernie or Luca ??
Quote from grandprix.com about the pit stop:
"One can argue that this took pressure off Michael but it was not a big deal given that Rubens would have been nearly six seconds behind Michael without the problem. Sorry, no conspiracy."
MS did his best time on lap 12, so no conspiracy over the broken exhaust either - both of them were apparently told to slow down while the telemetry was checked out (somewhere around lap 36 ? - can't remember).
I had expected Williams to be up there at the front, but for whatever reason they do seem to be marginally slower. Difficult to set up, and delicate brakes?
"One can argue that this took pressure off Michael but it was not a big deal given that Rubens would have been nearly six seconds behind Michael without the problem. Sorry, no conspiracy."
MS did his best time on lap 12, so no conspiracy over the broken exhaust either - both of them were apparently told to slow down while the telemetry was checked out (somewhere around lap 36 ? - can't remember).
I had expected Williams to be up there at the front, but for whatever reason they do seem to be marginally slower. Difficult to set up, and delicate brakes?
James, that's a hard question to answer off the cuff !
Having re-charged my brain cells (with the usual difficulty) I think Rubens comes out on top. Eddie certainly had his flashes of brilliance, but he was too inconsistent.
If you think about it they both had (have) the same problem. Up one day and down the next. Maybe temprament, maybe circuit preference - or one of a hundred factors we know nothing about.
Eddie's car didn't seem to get enough attention at the beginning of his time with Ferrari, but that was eventually sorted out, and I certainly don't subscribe to the 'number 2 car conspiracy' theories which fly about nowadays!
Problem is, Michael just seems to get better and better...
Having re-charged my brain cells (with the usual difficulty) I think Rubens comes out on top. Eddie certainly had his flashes of brilliance, but he was too inconsistent.
If you think about it they both had (have) the same problem. Up one day and down the next. Maybe temprament, maybe circuit preference - or one of a hundred factors we know nothing about.
Eddie's car didn't seem to get enough attention at the beginning of his time with Ferrari, but that was eventually sorted out, and I certainly don't subscribe to the 'number 2 car conspiracy' theories which fly about nowadays!
Problem is, Michael just seems to get better and better...
I think it's a compliment to Ferrari that the moment there is the merest glint of a chink in their armour, we start asking if they're slowing down on purpose!
IMHO it is because they have played very safe with this year's car. Williams, McLaren and BAR have all gambled on new technology but it's only really paid off for BAR. Hence their excellent recent form.
IMHO it is because they have played very safe with this year's car. Williams, McLaren and BAR have all gambled on new technology but it's only really paid off for BAR. Hence their excellent recent form.
true Gaz but if they had to reduce revs to save the engine then why didn't the rest of the field catch up ?
It just underlines that they are sandbagging and can run the car at lower revs to make sure tehy win comfortably.
Imagine the speeds and distances they'd cover if they used the full potential
It just underlines that they are sandbagging and can run the car at lower revs to make sure tehy win comfortably.
Imagine the speeds and distances they'd cover if they used the full potential
McNab said:
James, that's a hard question to answer off the cuff !
Having re-charged my brain cells (with the usual difficulty) I think Rubens comes out on top. Eddie certainly had his flashes of brilliance, but he was too inconsistent.
If you think about it they both had (have) the same problem. Up one day and down the next. Maybe temprament, maybe circuit preference - or one of a hundred factors we know nothing about.
Eddie's car didn't seem to get enough attention at the beginning of his time with Ferrari, but that was eventually sorted out, and I certainly don't subscribe to the 'number 2 car conspiracy' theories which fly about nowadays!
Problem is, Michael just seems to get better and better...
I put it down to their nationalities. They are all quick. It's just that the teutonic one is not a tempermental ulsterman or a passionate latino.
Gassing Station | General Motorsport | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff