Formula 1 Racing

Ferrari explains Leclerc’s inter tyre choice mistake

Laurent Mekies: Laurent Mekies:

The Maranello squad raised some eyebrows for the final shoot-out qualifying element at Interlagos when Leclerc was the only driver to head out on the circuit with intermediate tyres. Although rain was blowing in, the track was dry enough for slicks and that meant Leclerc’s option proved totally wrong as he ended up being slowest out of the 10 runners.

Leclerc was left deeply disappointed by the move, and vowed to speak to his bosses on Friday night to discuss how it could do things better in the future.

“We were expecting some rain which never came,” said the Monegasque driver. “I will speak with the team and try to understand what we can do better in those conditions. But I’m extremely disappointed. The pace was there.”

Ferrari has since explained that the decision to go for inters was made because it felt the best way to secure a spot at the front of the grid, with the weather conditions being on a knife-edge, was to split the strategy across both cars.

It believed if the rain had come in as quickly as forecast, then drivers on slicks could have struggled – and that would have left Leclerc on inters in the perfect spot to grab pole position.

Read Also:

Laurent Mekies: Laurent Mekies: “At that very moment where your cars are going out, depending on the exact timing of the rain, it’s going to be one happy man and one unhappy man.”

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

Ferrari race director Laurent Mekies said that, while the ‘golden rule’ of motor racing was always to go for slicks when the track was dry, the team felt it worth taking a gamble for Q3 because of the imminent rain.

“It’s a bit frustrating because we got both cars into Q3, and then we were confronted with a tough choice,” he said.

“On one side, you have the track still being dry. And there is a golden rule that says that you should go for that track while it is dry. On the other side, we were expecting heavy rain imminently. Therefore, at the end of the day, we have split our cars [strategy].”

Mekies said Ferrari accepted that one of its drivers would be compromised by the choice, but it felt that the potential rewards were worth it.

“You always know, at that very moment where your cars are going out that, depending on the exact timing of the rain, it’s going to be one happy man and one unhappy man. That’s exactly what happened.

“The rain came probably a minute or two too late for Charles, and was probably the right timing for…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Motorsport.com – Formula 1 – Stories…