
Originally Posted by
Gilles
I believe they have made the decision to work on the rules change early, sacrificing a little (a lot?) on the design of the 2020 (and 2019?) car(s). This change was pushed back, forcing them to continue competing with weak cars. So, of course, there are now restrictions on resources, but I imagine that what they had worked on in advance could have benefited them relatively to the competition. I hope Hass will benefit as well, and I expect to see Mick in a far much better car. Engine side, I have confidence, Italy is THE country of engines, they must get back to the top, especially following the humiliation of 2019/20. I know that the big teams find the means to circumvent the rules (example: at the moment, the evolutions for reliability are diverted, the powers should remain those omologation ones in my opinion, because Mercrdes goes really too far).
So I expect that at the end of next year the 3 big teams will be in front, the small ones, in the absence of surprising progress, should be behind.
If Ferrari had bet everything on the change of regulation, then they should be competitive in 2022. And when I hear Binotto say that he sees nothing wrong in the Mercedes engine, I hope he is preparing the ground to make accept a stong Ferrari in 2022. And if this is the case, it will be necessary to be strong politically vis-a-vis the possible attacks and cheating
i agree Italian engines are excellent, but this hybrid nonesense is not their specialty.
And getting off topic, while i guess the days of the ice are numbered, i hate seeing Ferrari and Lamborghini going electric/hybrid.
Ferrari (RACE) Shareholder
RIP Michelle Trachtenberg
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