Formula 1: The August change that destroyed Ferrari's title dreams - Sportish
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Formula 1: The August change that destroyed Ferrari’s title dreams

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Formula 1: The August change that destroyed Ferrari’s title dreams

The FIA’s technical guideline to limit the porpoise of this year’s Formula 1 cars, imposed at the GP in late August, is gradually emerging as the main cause of the Ferrari F1-75’s major problems ever since.

The Scuderia are now finding it extremely difficult, according to German reports, to unravel the FIA-imposed technical guideline (TD39) on porpoise control with the main issue that has prevented them from claiming a single victory since the Belgian GP to date : excessive tire wear.

Charles Leclerc won by walk in Austria and was fully competitive later that month at the French GP before losing control of the F1-75 and victory to Paul Ricard. But from the Hungarian GP, ​​when teams started applying Technical Instruction 39 – before officially implementing it at Spa in Belgium – the F1-75 was a completely different car.

The Cavallino, victorious in Spielberg, Austria with excellent tire management, was now taxing his tires so much that Leclerc and Carlos Sainz lost hope of converting the car’s speed into victories in Sunday’s qualifying, which is where tire management in particular comes into play in the sets of laps between pit stops.

Prior to the implementation of Technical Guideline 39, there was speculation that it would adversely affect both Ferrari and Red Bull, with RBR director Christian Horner implying that Mercedes F1 director Toto Wolff was jumping behind the technical guideline due to W13’s major problems stuck.

However, the technical directive, which also limited the elasticity of the bottoms of the cars to 2 millimeters, proved to be disadvantageous only for Ferrari. At the time, Scuderia director Mattia Binotto denied that the TD39 had any negative impact on the F1-75, but now that view is gaining ground – even at Maranello and in everything to do with tire management.

Now, as per the German press, the Ferrari F1-75’s tire management problems and the FIA’s Technical Guideline 39 came at exactly the same time, and now even Scuderia itself is finding it difficult to deny such a connection.

In particular, the competition from Ferrari is said to have noticed that after Belgium, the F1-75 had to be adjusted for increased ground clearance, which had a significant impact not only on its balance and thus on its tire management.

Scuderia unveiled a modified floor at the Japanese GP, their latest car development of the year, with the main aim of improving tire management. And Binotto said that “It works as expected, the data confirm the development step. The lap speed is there, now we have to see what we can do differently with tire management.”concluded the Italian.

And this is an area that’s particularly critical for Scuderia as it nears the completion of car design in 2023, when Ferrari is expected to return to title racing in the next Formula 1 championship.

Photo credit: Scuderia Ferrari press office

Source: sport 24

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Mercedes explains how Hamilton’s move to Ferrari affected the team

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Mercedes explains how Hamilton’s move to Ferrari affected the team

Mercedes director of track engineering Andrew Schoulin commented on Lewis Hamilton’s impact on the car’s development a year after his departure.

Hamilton and Mercedes have formed the most successful partnership in F1 history, winning six drivers’ championships and eight constructors’ championships between 2014 and 2021.

But at the end of 2024, the Briton opted to switch to Ferrari, and in 2025 this turned out to be unsuccessful: Hamilton failed to reach the podium in a single Grand Prix.

The 40-year-old champion was replaced by Kimi Antonelli, who made significant progress alongside the experienced George Russell.

With his departure, Hamilton left the team leadership role to Russell. This allowed Antonelli to adapt to F1 without the pressure of being responsible for car feedback, although Shovlin stressed that his communication about the car was of a high standard.

“Honestly, George is fine. The important thing is that we don’t develop the car based solely on what the pilot says,” Shovlin said.

“Most of the work comes from simulations: we look for downforce, the stability of the car, we reduce aerodynamic drag and tune the suspension to ensure the car falls into the best aerodynamic window.

So most decisions are not based on the pilot saying “I need this” and we rush to find a solution. But it is very useful to have a consistent pilot like George. He knows these cars within those rules, so we didn’t have to worry about losing our mark in the development of the car.”

“Kimi also describes the behavior of the car perfectly, so there were no problems in that regard. The main thing is that we had a fantastic collaboration with Lewis and a lot of success, and then he decided to try a new challenge at Ferrari.”

“We always looked at Kimi as the future of the team and a training year was inevitable. We fully embraced that and overall I think it went well.”

Source: Sport UA

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Former F1 team boss says new teammate Verstappen’s biggest advantage

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Former F1 team boss says new teammate Verstappen’s biggest advantage

Former Haas boss Henter Steiner says Isak Hajjar will be Max Verstappen’s teammate at Red Bull and will have the chance to avoid the problems faced by his predecessors.

The French driver took the hardest place in the peloton, as they say in F1. Following the departure of Daniel Ricciardo, many of Verstappen’s team-mates succumbed to the pressure: Pierre Gasly returned to Toro Rosso after a year and a half, Alex Albon lasted only a season and a half, Yuki Tsunoda lasted 22 races and Liam Lawson only two races. Sergio Perez, who stayed for four years, was an exception.

But Hajar has a special advantage: New technical rules force everyone to start from scratch.

“Isak is a very strong driver,” said Steiner

And most importantly, it will start at Red Bull with new rules. “This allows him to co-shape the car with Max, rather than getting into a car that is already built for a single driver.”

Source: Sport UA

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Little-known points about Uganda

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Little-known points about Uganda

Uganda had to be content with the one point they got thanks to Uche Ikpeazu, but it was just that, as Alan Okello conceded the next moment with a missed penalty for Tanzania (1-1).

Both teams had come back from losses on their debuts and their success depended on whether they had a real chance of progressing to the finals, but the situation has become very complicated as Tunisia and Nigeria, who play each other on the final day, have a chance of winning. Therefore, the main objective is to consider being one of the four best third parties to advance to the round of 16 as well.

It was an embarrassing result for Uganda, but all things considered, thankfully they managed to save a point. It was a very even match and the second half started with a goal for the opponents (59th minute). This was due to Simoun Msbah’s penalty after a handball in the Baba area. Fortunately, they persevered and Uche scored the equalizer with a flat shot with 10 minutes remaining (80 minutes). Okello, known in his homeland as ‘Starchild’, missed a chance to win after Mnoga’s penalty against Bogere, and his shot went over the bar.

Source: Mundo Deportivo

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