twobjshelbys
GT Owner
Well, most would have to admit that that was one heck of a race and an unequivocal home-run for the sport and Vegas in general. Even street circuit critical drivers like Max had to admit it was better than expected. The thing I think they got right is run off areas and general design of the track to keep things rolling and exciting. Very high speed with great passing and overtakes during the race. There was several times yellows came out that could have spoiled the rhythm of the race but they designed the track so carefully that they cleared easily and there was little interruption to the action. That is remarkable feat for a new venue. Looking forward to seeing that Ford logo back on an F1 car again!
I watched it on TV. I'd never seen a F1 race before but I thought it was well paced with enough action to mix things up. There was one turn that had a lot of sneak passes that if a first driver went wide the one right behind could come on the left and get by.
Lots of complaints by drivers early on about the track surface (besides water pit covers coming off) being slick and cold. Well, it's new asphalt. They also didn't like the fact that there were civilian vehicles on the streets during the day making them "dirty". Well, I'm sure other street circuits share that but they wanted to make it sound like it was a problem only here, just like the complainers failed to mention that at least two other circuits had problem with utility pits. Slick comes from two aspects: New asphalt and temperature. Sorry, this ain't gonna drive like the other desert venues. I think they were confused about the US Southwest desert. It gets cold here at night! During one of the practice runs they seemed amazed and confused that the road temp and air temp were the same (62F) Yep. That's the way it works. The surface will age and perhaps be a little more predictable next year, but the cooler desert temp and what it does to the race strategy is kind of a nice mixer.
I think the jury is still out on race time. Supposedly set to make it more accessible to Europe time but probably more realistically to minimize impact on the strip. I haven't heard anything about changing it for future races.
There is talk that some of the race features like temporary pedestrian overpasses might stay. Making them permanent might make things better.
The one thing that they did disturb was parking on the strip. The last remaining venues that didn't charge now do and those that had a locals pass cut it back from 4 hrs to 3 hrs so now I'll have to pay $40 to park for the U2 show coming up in a few weeks.
But by the end it seemed that most drivers and teams thought the track was OK.
Flagging is always disruptive to the rhythm, no matter if its F1 or anything else. But safety can also be a concern. I saw a clickbait article that said one driver radioed "home" during the time the safety car came on to pace for the cleanup of some debris. He said the safety car was going too slow and that he was losing grip on all 4 tires. Either speed up the safety car or red flag it. I get his point. Aging the track surface will help some.
Can't wait til next year!
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