Sieper wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 23:05
AR3-GP wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 22:55
basti313 wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 22:52
Max would not have gone into the gravel.
Yes but the poster is arguing that the outside line on a race start is advantageous.
That holds some truth here, the outside line is the raceline here. Many circuits have p1 in front, but not per se the best spot.
Verstappen will make any position "look like the best starting spot".
I remember the starts that Verstappen managed in Mexico many years ago. In 2021 he went from 3rd to 1st after the start. The detractors said "You don't want pole in Mexico because of the long run to the T1 and the tow, easy move for Max". The next year he started from pole and led the first corner.

Then the narrative shifted: "Pole is the best starting spot" Over the years there, he won the start from the outside lane ("of course, the outside lets you carry more speed"), the middle lane ("of course, the others have to back out"), and the inside lane ("of course, it's the inside line to the corner"). Detractors were chasing their tails...
Anyway, back to Imola. Verstappen would never have lost the lead from Piastri's position, and we wouldn't be talking about outside line being favored here (that is only done by some to belittle the difference between the two that allows something like this to happen). Drivers go into T1 with cold tires and a full fuel load so the grip and braking points are changed. Piastri didn't know where to brake. You simply don't go into a race with Max Verstappen and "not know where to brake". Piastri should have tested the braking distances from each lane on his practice starts from Friday. That's the level of preparation that you need if you are hoping to challenge Max because he will punish anything less than 100%. You need to execute perfectly from start to finish, or have an overwhelming car advantage to beat him.
It doesn't turn.