ringo wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 02:48
Oscar did not have to leave room, as he was tucked up on the inside, i think he was shocked to see Max there and his reflex was to avoid being damaged. If he was a Perez or Max himself, he would have "understeered" more to the outside.
As good as Max's move was, it was living on a prayer. It was a clinical divebomb that could have resulted in a crash where Piastri would not be blamed for it.
With the pace they had at the Miami GP he may have gone in thinking, "he got the lead lap 1, no biggie", and honestly that seemed fair enough.
Hamilton, Verstappen... all of them really... become a lot less "do or die" into T1 if they think they'll get the lead back later anyway, risking losing a wing, a damaged floor, a puncture, with a dominant car isn't smart(Verstappen didn't have many "incidents" in 2023 did he?).
I think the lesson for Oscar is if you can block Russell or Verstappen, chose Verstappen.
Even if Russell looks in a stronger position on the road, he is the one that isn't in the championship and the one you will inevitably get past anyway.
Applies to pretty much any other driver on the grid this season, with the exception of Norris perhaps.
If it's Norris to one side and Max in the other, that's a tough call lol.