Why does he need to push like the season he did in 2022 with Alpine if this year he fight for nothing better have fun and stay ready for 2026
Why does he need to push like the season he did in 2022 with Alpine if this year he fight for nothing better have fun and stay ready for 2026
Raw speed is fading? What evidence is there to support that statement? Stroll has been Alonso's benchmark since 2023 and is no closer in qualifying or in overall race pace. I apologise if I am mistaken, but I believe you were the one who said that "2012 Alonso would be fighting with the Ferraris and Mercedes." This car is more than half a second slower in race pace than them. Pace is relative to the quality of the car.
I think the top speed issue is BS, Stroll was 4th fastest top speed at the speed trap in Quali @ Spain. I think they solved some of their rear traction problems with the Imola upgrade. The evidence of that is the wear in Spain was higher on the fronts. The rears were not limiting factor. That and Montreal isn't hard on it's tires.
diffuser, speed traps in qualifying can be deceiving because we don't know how much of a toe the driver had. I watched Alonso's in-car at Spain and the cars ahead were always pulling away on the front straight under the same conditions. From visual appearance of the rear wings that teams bring to tracks, Aston Martin is generally running larger wings to compensate for the lack of downforce.diffuser wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:18I think the top speed issue is BS, Stroll was 4th fastest top speed at the speed trap in Quali @ Spain. I think they solved some of their rear traction problems with the Imola upgrade. The evidence of that is the wear in Spain was higher on the fronts. The rears were not limiting factor. That and Montreal isn't hard on it's tires.
https://media.formula1.com/image/upload ... preview-en
Come on be realistic....2012 Alonso would be behind Stroll in points?TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 15:56Raw speed is fading? What evidence is there to support that statement? Stroll has been Alonso's benchmark since 2023 and is no closer in qualifying or in overall race pace. I apologise if I am mistaken, but I believe you were the one who said that "2012 Alonso would be fighting with the Ferraris and Mercedes." This car is more than half a second slower in race pace than them. Pace is relative to the quality of the car.
The top speed came after the upgrade cause top speed was maybe the only good positive thing form AMR24 and AMR25, at Imola Alonso talked with De la Rosa about top speed issue. But Barcelona looked better especially after the front wing adjustments. Finger crossed to confirm it in Canada.diffuser wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:18I think the top speed issue is BS, Stroll was 4th fastest top speed at the speed trap in Quali @ Spain. I think they solved some of their rear traction problems with the Imola upgrade. The evidence of that is the wear in Spain was higher on the fronts. The rears were not limiting factor. That and Montreal isn't hard on it's tires.
https://media.formula1.com/image/upload ... preview-en
Note the tire differences from 2024 ...
https://content.presspage.com/uploads/2 ... .jpg?10000
Just wow.GoranF1 wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:43Come on be realistic....2012 Alonso would be behind Stroll in points?TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 15:56Raw speed is fading? What evidence is there to support that statement? Stroll has been Alonso's benchmark since 2023 and is no closer in qualifying or in overall race pace. I apologise if I am mistaken, but I believe you were the one who said that "2012 Alonso would be fighting with the Ferraris and Mercedes." This car is more than half a second slower in race pace than them. Pace is relative to the quality of the car.
The speed is fading, alot.
This Alonso is just a shadow of prime Alonso. Prime Alonso took Ferrari to podium almost every race despite car being slower to RB, Mercedes, McLaren sometimes even Lotus(Renault).....so prime Alonso would take this AM to podium also
You think Alonso is just as fast as he always was?TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:52Just wow.GoranF1 wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:43Come on be realistic....2012 Alonso would be behind Stroll in points?TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 15:56
Raw speed is fading? What evidence is there to support that statement? Stroll has been Alonso's benchmark since 2023 and is no closer in qualifying or in overall race pace. I apologise if I am mistaken, but I believe you were the one who said that "2012 Alonso would be fighting with the Ferraris and Mercedes." This car is more than half a second slower in race pace than them. Pace is relative to the quality of the car.
The speed is fading, alot.
This Alonso is just a shadow of prime Alonso. Prime Alonso took Ferrari to podium almost every race despite car being slower to RB, Mercedes, McLaren sometimes even Lotus(Renault).....so prime Alonso would take this AM to podium also
I don't feel it's worth my time debating when you use this year's points as a basis for Alonso's speed.GoranF1 wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 17:24You think Alonso is just as fast as he always was?TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:52Just wow.GoranF1 wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:43
Come on be realistic....2012 Alonso would be behind Stroll in points?
The speed is fading, alot.
This Alonso is just a shadow of prime Alonso. Prime Alonso took Ferrari to podium almost every race despite car being slower to RB, Mercedes, McLaren sometimes even Lotus(Renault).....so prime Alonso would take this AM to podium also
He didn't have any problems passing Lawson on the 2nd to last lap.TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:38diffuser, speed traps in qualifying can be deceiving because we don't know how much of a toe the driver had. I watched Alonso's in-car at Spain and the cars ahead were always pulling away on the front straight under the same conditions. From visual appearance of the rear wings that teams bring to tracks, Aston Martin is generally running larger wings to compensate for the lack of downforce.diffuser wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:18I think the top speed issue is BS, Stroll was 4th fastest top speed at the speed trap in Quali @ Spain. I think they solved some of their rear traction problems with the Imola upgrade. The evidence of that is the wear in Spain was higher on the fronts. The rears were not limiting factor. That and Montreal isn't hard on it's tires.
https://media.formula1.com/image/upload ... preview-en
I said under the same conditions, other cars pulled away on the straight. Alonso was close behind Lawson and had DRS, Lawson didn't.diffuser wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 18:26He didn't have any problems passing Lawson on the 2nd to last lap.TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:38diffuser, speed traps in qualifying can be deceiving because we don't know how much of a toe the driver had. I watched Alonso's in-car at Spain and the cars ahead were always pulling away on the front straight under the same conditions. From visual appearance of the rear wings that teams bring to tracks, Aston Martin is generally running larger wings to compensate for the lack of downforce.
TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 18:34I said under the same conditions, other cars pulled away on the straight. Alonso was close behind Lawson and had DRS, Lawson didn't.diffuser wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 18:26He didn't have any problems passing Lawson on the 2nd to last lap.TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 16:38diffuser, speed traps in qualifying can be deceiving because we don't know how much of a toe the driver had. I watched Alonso's in-car at Spain and the cars ahead were always pulling away on the front straight under the same conditions. From visual appearance of the rear wings that teams bring to tracks, Aston Martin is generally running larger wings to compensate for the lack of downforce.
people are weirdly willing him to suddenly fall off a cliff. theres no evidence that his "raw pace" is suffering at all. the only evidence i see is that he is sick of driving under-performing cars, and probably has to fight to stay engaged when he has no chance of competing at the front. the lack of faith in this old guy is annoying af sometimes. hes done proven that an f1 driver doesnt have to lose their skill in their late 30s if they keep working. unfortunately there are still gonna be people that are gonna write them off no matter how well they do against their teammate.TyreSlip wrote: ↑12 Jun 2025, 15:56Raw speed is fading? What evidence is there to support that statement? Stroll has been Alonso's benchmark since 2023 and is no closer in qualifying or in overall race pace. I apologise if I am mistaken, but I believe you were the one who said that "2012 Alonso would be fighting with the Ferraris and Mercedes." This car is more than half a second slower in race pace than them. Pace is relative to the quality of the car.