@JackieF1nut@F1_driven I agree. The '24 Silverstone win was very emotional but the first Ferrari win was historic, particularly in the context of his age and moving to a new team culture with a very quick team mate who was already ensconced within the set-up.
@thanos876@Gojoo______ A few drivers have done it in the past. Prost comes to mind with McLaren, Ferrari and Williams. Gehard Berger with Benneton, McLaren and Ferrari too.
@Carice21 Always assuming our national governments will uphold those values into the future. With the way our politics is moving I'm not so sure. Also the ECHR has been used in the past by British citizens when they feel they can't get satisfactory outcomes in the UK legal system.
@JackieF1nut@shilreas It looks like the intricacies of their respective needs from the brakes has caused this divergence. Lewis requires a very solid pedal with zero inconsistencies to make his late braking style work. CI pads apparently give him the stability required.
@JackieF1nut@shilreas A very good piece was written by Mark Hughes on the subject. Apparently Brembo had been experimenting with changes to their pads in response to feedback from Lewis last season. This doesn't appear to have suited Charles even though Lewis has moved to CI pads.
@JackieF1nut@ManarrHosam To finish first first you must finish. No way Leclerc was quicker than Hamilton in Canada. Absolute nonsense. In Monaco they were fairly evenly matched. I think Lewis had more tyre degradation on his first stint which skewed the race towards Leclerc a bit on pace.
@JackieF1nut Mercedes pace is awesome and Charles, Max and McLaren will be back in Spain. Lewis driving very well so hopefully a close fight to come in Spain.
@HillF1 Remember watching the race on TV. Can't believe it's 30 years. God damn that Reanult V10. So close to a magnificent Monaco win. That race was always the one that got away from your records.
@LBC I think Trump should worry about problems in his own country and the mess he has created around the world rather than interfering in UK domestic affairs.