google-site-verification: googlec7193c3de77668c9.html

Monaco Grand Prix: Lando Norris and Lando Norris among drivers to give two-stop rule mixed reviews

Dbeb7340 3990 11f0 9622 11e0d330cba3.jpg

Advertisements

Norris added: “Overtaking has never been good in Monaco, ever. So, I don’t know why people have such a high expectation. But I also think Formula 1 should not turn into just a show to entertain people. It’s a sport. It’s who can race the best, who can qualify the best.

“Everything was about yesterday. That’s the way it’s been since whatever the first year – 50, 60 years ago. So, the last thing I want is manufactured racing, and we definitely need to stay away from that and do a better job with cars, with tyres.”

Championship leader Piastri said: “It definitely made it a bit more tense at a few points. You had to push more at certain points to kind of recover the safety car windows to other cars around you, or put yourself outside of someone else’s safety car window. So there were some strategic elements involved. But ultimately, at the front, I don’t think it changed a whole lot.

“It would have been quite a different story if there was a red flag with five laps to go and Max would have won. I’m sure if we keep this going in the future, eventually a result like that will happen. Is that what we want to see? I don’t know. But at the front, I don’t think it changed a huge amount this weekend.”

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said: “The race was interesting in terms of how many scenarios needed to be considered.

“The main limitation remains the fact that you cannot overtake. This is quite structural as a limitation. I am not sure exactly how this can be modified, can be changed, just simply by imposing a certain number of pit stops.”

Stella said he was “interested” to see whether the new rules next year, which introduces cars that are 10 centimetres narrower than this year with a new style of engine, make a difference.

“I would hope that this change of the cars will make overtaking possible, even at least when you are three seconds faster, because at the moment if you are three seconds faster, still you cannot overtake,” Stella said.

“But this has very much to do with the size of the car, with the speed of the car and the grip, which means that the braking zones are anyhow very, very short. There’s just not materially the space in braking.”

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff said: “We tried something, we tried an experiment with two-stop, didn’t change anything in the outcome.”

Wolff said F1 should consider introducing a rule to prevent teams using one car to back up the field to advantage another driver, as both Racing Bulls and Williams did on Sunday.

But Ferrari team principal Frederic Vasseur said such a rule would be “impossible” to police.

Hamilton added: “It’s a very, very difficult track. You obviously can’t overtake. But still, an amazing spectacle and an amazing location. So many people. I’ve never seen so many people here. It’s insane.

“And to drive it on a single lap, it’s incredible. So, the Friday and Saturday is unbelievable. And the Sunday is kind of the day that you want off, almost.”


BBC News

Views: 3

See also  Watch Keys secure shock win against Swiatek at Australian Open

Check Also

Ronaldo has equaliser ruled out for offside

Cristiano Ronaldo has an equalising goal ruled out for offside during Portugal’s round of 32 …

T20 World Cup: How hard work and a disco jacket helped England improve their fielding

There is, of course, more to England’s improvement than a coach dressing like an ABBA …

Mikel Oyarzabal: The one-club man who has become Spain’s ‘most decisive player’

For much of an international career that began a decade ago at the age of …

Leave a Reply

Available for Amazon Prime