The ground effect cars + his age have been the perfect recipe for disaster. These cars are tricky to drive but younger drivers can work their way around it unlike Lewis who can only win nowadays if the car is perfect. That being said, I can imagine him winning in Silverstone and Budapest if the car is sorted out by then.CHT wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 06:01LH struggle with setup in Merc for the last 2 years and now in Ferrari.
Perhaps it's not the team or the car, but the driver himself.
I think Charles can be happy with the podium finish. As for LH, 2025 could be another very long and tough season for him. His first race in Italy is going to be very difficult if he continues to struggle.
Yep, pretty much spot on. The sprint result bought him time, but at the minute, it’s hard to defend his performances. Worrying times.r85 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 09:51The ground effect cars + his age have been the perfect recipe for disaster. These cars are tricky to drive but younger drivers can work their way around it unlike Lewis who can only win nowadays if the car is perfect. That being said, I can imagine him winning in Silverstone and Budapest if the car is sorted out by then.CHT wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 06:01LH struggle with setup in Merc for the last 2 years and now in Ferrari.
Perhaps it's not the team or the car, but the driver himself.
I think Charles can be happy with the podium finish. As for LH, 2025 could be another very long and tough season for him. His first race in Italy is going to be very difficult if he continues to struggle.
Mclaren were adamant the updated RW flexing restrictions would not impact them but (as far as I know) they have lost a step in their straight line speed (https://www.espn.com/f1/story/_/id/4432 ... er-mclaren). Piastri is the only one telling the truth at McL and I think that is just good mental pressure he is applying to Lando. I think all teams will say it doesn't impact them, the only truth will be the lap time.deadhead wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 03:40From what LEC was saying in the interviews it seems like they are betting on the new technical directive helping them close the gap, which is basically what Horner has been saying for months. McLaren don't seem very worried about the new front wings so I feel like they have that covered, but we shall see.SoulPancake13 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 02:12The Imola upgrades will be crucial to keep morale high, but I think the gap in the championship is quite insurmountable barring a huge leap from us.
Somewhat on that topic - 2026 needs to be catered towards Leclerc as much as possible. This is an all time special talent we have.
McLaren hasn't lost anything in straight line speed, they've always been bad in that area compared to the others ever since 2023 actually. The TD changed nothing about it.Space-heat wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 13:24Mclaren were adamant the updated RW flexing restrictions would not impact them but (as far as I know) they have lost a step in their straight line speed (https://www.espn.com/f1/story/_/id/4432 ... er-mclaren). Piastri is the only one telling the truth at McL and I think that is just good mental pressure he is applying to Lando. I think all teams will say it doesn't impact them, the only truth will be the lap time.deadhead wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 03:40From what LEC was saying in the interviews it seems like they are betting on the new technical directive helping them close the gap, which is basically what Horner has been saying for months. McLaren don't seem very worried about the new front wings so I feel like they have that covered, but we shall see.SoulPancake13 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 02:12The Imola upgrades will be crucial to keep morale high, but I think the gap in the championship is quite insurmountable barring a huge leap from us.
Somewhat on that topic - 2026 needs to be catered towards Leclerc as much as possible. This is an all time special talent we have.
The strange thing is, that Merc seem to be as big of culprits for the noodle wings but George was talking at some point in the last two weekend (looked through F1 and sky interviews but can't find it) about how the Spain TD will change the order, as if it will help Merc, so who really knows what to expect.
One would imagine, TD018 will impact front end DF, so I wonder will Ferrari have to bring a new floor to rebalance the car. It makes me less optimistic that the Imola package will be anything large. If the ride height issue is a thing, and they can fix that at Imola through some rear suspension or other non floor update it might make sense, but with the potential shift in Spain, you'd think Ferrari would just hold until then to also include the TD018 impact.
Anyway, Miami is probably going to be similar to Bahrain. Charles has already been clear that he has the cars sweet spot so we aren't getting any more performance through that. So most likely battling for P3-P5 with Max and George.
You’ve obviously not watched F1 for very long. It’s not easy to just rock up, whoever you are, and instantly make a team become champions. Alonso tried and failed, and so did, Vettel. You then talk about clicking your fingers and signing Max, even though you’ve just committed hundreds of millions to Lewis. Good luck terminating that with a good outcome and then throwing hundreds of more millions at Max. That’s if, he even wanted to join a team that hasn’t won anything for nearly twenty years, and is currently not even remotely near the front end of the grid. Mind boggling. Further to this, Max would want a snail as a teammate, and not someone like, Charles.Aesop wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 13:33You’d expect that a driver of Lewis stature would inspire and lift the team to help them take that final step to be WC contenders. It’s sad to see it is quite the opposite.
I can’t see any upsides now in Lewis driving the Ferrari anymore. Clearly he and Charles have very different preferences which could further complicate development for next years regs. Perhaps Ferrari should consider bringin in Max next year. That would be a cracking line up with Charles and both tend to like oversteer with a loose end which would help to determine which way to go with development.
I'd made the case that you cán and should instantly inspire the team. Noone expected Lewis to be on par with Charles and fight for the Championship immediately. But he is so far of the pace, he is so vocal about his shortcomings and lack of understanding the car and doesnt seem to believe he can turn it around. Thats not what Ferrari needs. Lewis needs to up his game, but, even more so, his spirit. I seriously doubt he can.DGP123 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 14:08You’ve obviously not watched F1 for very long. It’s not easy to just rock up, whoever you are, and instantly make a team become champions.Aesop wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 13:33You’d expect that a driver of Lewis stature would inspire and lift the team to help them take that final step to be WC contenders. It’s sad to see it is quite the opposite.
I can’t see any upsides now in Lewis driving the Ferrari anymore. Clearly he and Charles have very different preferences which could further complicate development for next years regs. Perhaps Ferrari should consider bringin in Max next year. That would be a cracking line up with Charles and both tend to like oversteer with a loose end which would help to determine which way to go with development.