More than once now, we’ve seen Ferrari top free practice on Friday, in France by as much as half a second, but have higher degradation over the long runs. They then seem to dial it back a bit on Saturday morning, with a set-up better suited to the race. And Leclerc, when asked, has always been bullish about his race prospects.
In Barcelona, Charles seemed to have Red Bull handled in the race before his engine let go. After that, through a combination of unreliability and Fred Karno pit operation, we didn’t get a proper read over the next four races, although Verstappen looked highly convincing at Silverstone before he hit debris. Ferrari, however, looked even more convincing in the manner they won Austria.
Ricard, until Leclerc lost it, was fascinating. Max had a few looks in the early laps, but realised the DRS effect wasn’t quite strong enough. The Ferrari had its lead out to 2sec as the pit stop window approached – Leclerc’s biggest margin to that point – and Red Bull went for about as aggressive a first stop as feasible.
Such is the degradation at Ricard that the undercut is powerful, but when Verstappen left the pits behind Norris and Alonso, you figured that Ferrari might just about cover him if they pitted Leclerc immediately.
They didn’t though, and as soon as they didn’t, you knew that there was no chance of Leclerc retaining his lead. So you figured that Ferrari thought its best chance of winning was to maximise the tyre offset, as they did in Austria.
But, from the radio transmissions, it was tricky to work out whether they were on plan A, B, C or Z, and you have to think that Leclerc was confused as well. If the plan was to extend his medium-tyre opening stint to maximise the offset, why was he pushing quite so hard at Le Beausset? That looked like a driver who thought he was about to be called in. So, did the team contribute with less than decisive calls. We’ve seen it before…
Leclerc being Leclerc, took it on the chin, said it was an unacceptable mistake, that he didn’t deserve to win the championship doing things like that, and asked what was the point of having pace if he was going to do that?
The psychology of such brutal self-assessment is interesting. When a top-quality performer makes a howler, it often doesn’t compute, and they look for an explanation that exonerates them. John McEnroe, for example, tended to have his most heated linesman / umpire rants within a couple of points of missing a shot that, for him, was a given.
At first, I suspected that Leclerc was doing likewise, blaming a throttle problem such as he’d experienced in the closing laps in Austria, but what he was referring too was not getting the throttle response needed to back himself out of the tyres.