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16 Sep 2024, 18:11 (Ref:4227210) | #1326 | |
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There are all pro lineups and factory cars in the top class at the Spa 24 hours and the Nurburgring 24 hours. There is also a Pro GT3 category in IMSA. GT3 is not all "pro-am" club racing. Many of the drivers in Hypercar, were previously in these GT3 championships as pro drivers.
Last edited by Articus; 16 Sep 2024 at 18:18. |
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16 Sep 2024, 18:43 (Ref:4227212) | #1327 | ||
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Im pointing out the bop is not looking like much of a balance but more like a handicap for doing well in a race. Hopefully you see that in this post. |
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16 Sep 2024, 19:21 (Ref:4227214) | #1328 | ||||||
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If you make the more accurate assumption that, as best as the ACO can, BoP is applied to equalise the maximum performance of each car, you would see winning/leading cars receiving breaks as a testament to the team's ability to maximise the potential of their performance window, which was judged to have been lower than their competitors. This is actually why Toyota cleaned up last year (see below), they executed their race strategies better. Quote:
Simple question, simple answer. Let's leave the whatabboutism, unless we actually want to go round in circles (tyres are round, after all!) Quote:
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16 Sep 2024, 19:41 (Ref:4227216) | #1329 | |||||
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It's not an opinion that Toyota made mistakes that cost them any fight in the championship. Kobayashi ended the fight of the 7 car in Fuji and gave the 6 Porsche a free pass for Bahrain. Lopez lost Le Mans. They had a fuel system problem in Brazil that pushed the 7 car back to 3rd. Kobayashi broke the rules in COTA. This is simply what happened. You don't need the best BOP at every race to win a championship. Porsche is proving that. They minimized reliability problems and driver errors.
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Porsche won 2 races before Fuji (Qatar and Spa). Toyota was in the fight to win 4 races before Fuji (Imola, Le Mans, Sao Paolo, COTA) but made mistakes in 2 of them that cost them the race. Quote:
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It's clear you have a chip on your shoulder about Toyota and BOP slowing them. Your username is TF110...I'm not going to continue a discussion with someone who fundamentally disagrees simply because Toyota isn't winning every race. Toyota had their chances to win this championship without winning every race and they blew it when Lopez spun at Le Mans, when Kamui broke the rules in COTA, when the car broke in Sao Paolo, and when they imploded in Fuji instead of consolidating a top 5 and taking the fight to Bahrain where they should be stronger. Last edited by Articus; 16 Sep 2024 at 20:01. |
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16 Sep 2024, 19:47 (Ref:4227217) | #1330 | ||
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Race by race BoP is exactly how it should happen. Little and often as more data comes in.
I understand that it can be difficult to follow, but even if you ignore the best way to do the process and think only about perception of it then it is probably still better than not doing anything for a long time and then a bigger movement. Especially as you’d want to do that love before the most important race. |
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16 Sep 2024, 20:53 (Ref:4227224) | #1331 | |
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I think almost everything's been already said here but I'll add one more thing. It's so easy to say that BOP was wrong for car x at race y... after that race. Before the race there can be some expectations from fans and manufacturers themselves but it's the actual racing that verifies if the BOP is ok or not.
So in the end it's never perfect but the goal is for BOP to be as good as possible and imo the ACO had done very decent job so far this season. I don't see anything fixed for any specific manufacturer(s) like Boyota fans seem to like to suggest since their beloved marque lost crazy advantage they had in 2021-2023 seasons. But if the goal is to make BOP absolutely perfect, then I guess we need preview races on Saturday, after which the ACO would make needed BOP adjustments and then an actual race on Sunday. It's a crazy, non-practical idea ofc and one might say what about sandbagging? Simple, same as IMSA did at Daytona for GTD, if you magically find extra pace that wasn't expected to be there, you get penalized I guess that would satisfy all BOP moaners. But let's go back to reality and since tyre wear was mentioned multiple times, I got one interesting observation. What were the races this year where a specific manufacturer had a huge tyre wear advantage? Imola and Sao Paulo. At Imola the 499P could quad stint at least on one side, others weren't even close to that. And in Brazil it was only Toyota running all race on meds in that heat and having less wear than others. What's crucial here, in Italy it was Ferrari with a big pace advantage vs others and in Brazil it was Toyota. Coincidence that better tyre wear follows great pace? Maybe. But I think it's easier to manage things when you have lots of pace in hand vs others. |
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16 Sep 2024, 21:29 (Ref:4227228) | #1332 | ||
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I don't give a damn about SRO's GT3, we are in the ACO section here and we talk about the WEC BoP. If BoP was not a kind of "success ballast" in Hypercar today, it would be published once and for all 3 months before the race. Like it was before LM23. It is not, and the process lacks transparency. That opens the door to any criticism, whether you like it or not that is a fact. Make it more transparent, involve manufacturers in it and put them in front of their responsibility if they are lagging behind. Easier said than done, but the ACO have to try something new and out of the box to have all the banter cease. Two paths : more BoP with more transparency, or less BoP with less modifications. |
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16 Sep 2024, 23:06 (Ref:4227235) | #1333 | |||||||||
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Last point I'll make is, bop can't be reactionary. That's what it's starting to look like. If they do bop then it shouldn't be based on results of the last round because that will lead to sandbagging for a more important race. |
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16 Sep 2024, 23:25 (Ref:4227237) | #1334 | ||
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BoP. Brilliant or Pants.
BoP can and should be tweaked every round. It should react to new data! That’s exactly what it should do.
As long as it isn’t actually on results, but on performance data. If you don’t you are deciding to ignore new information and let something continue to be wrong. And someone will be moaning before anyway. Someone who moans before a race and there aren’t changes will still have the same moan. Even parking that the process theoretically should mean a reassessment each race, if you do change each race then the moaning might average out! But seriously, what the ACO should not do is legislate for what people might incorrectly think! That way lies madness. Just keep doing your best at every opportunity. It is never perfectly right, but just keep minimising the amount you are wrong. |
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17 Sep 2024, 04:52 (Ref:4227259) | #1335 | ||
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Maybe I should phrase things this way: do you watch racing because you see it as a sport, or do you see it as entertainment?
As far as promoters and sanctioning bodies go, racing is a form of sports entertainment. And yes, I'm well aware of that phrase's negative connotations, due to it's associations with professional wrestling (which almost everyone knows is rigged/staged typically) and with the guy who created the term, Vince McMahon (enough said there for anyone following his controversies). But all sports, be it most motorsports and most stick and ball sports, have been trying to boost entertainment value for years to try and draw in new fans, though some of the gimmicks and other things have caused a loss of goodwill with the older fan base. But the fact is that trying to appeal to younger fans is important due to the simple fact that the old guard is in some cases literally dying (sad but true fact). And younger fans tend to be more biased to the entertainment factor. And as a millennial (though among the old guard as far as that goes), I do see the positives and negatives with that, and I'm for sure not entirely in agreement with things centered around short attention spans and short form content. But it is what it is, and as far as the sport vs entertainment vs sports entertainment spectrum, as far as motorsports, I'm probably in the minority. IMO, if I just want to be entertained by racing cars, I just watch old races, or historic racing or documentaries. Old races and documentaries are what they are, and as far as historic racing, there's no points, no championships, just guys having fun and fans having fun. A lot of that might be more amateur than full on pro racing, but so be it. Maybe I'm just not a fan of professionalized racing in the modern era. I'm def. not a fan of NASCAR or F1 with all the egos involved among drivers, teams and the sanctioning bodies and promoters. But that's also where much of the money in the motorsports world gravitates to. Maybe get rid of money, the whole sport would be better? But back on topic, still not a fan of race to race BOP changes. It does sort of smack to me of either the sanctioning body not getting things right with the basic rules package, that their data about the cars and tracks (which the ACO and FIA have access to) is wrong, or the sanctioning body is trying to contrive things to put on a show (sports vs entertainment vs sports entertainment). But that's the trend, and it's not going away anytime soon unless everyone rebels against the concept (including sanctioning bodies and promoters) and it gets abandoned. However, I also feel that everyone contributes to the problem, but everyone can also contribute to a solution. Just don't let egos get involved, which is easier said than done, and I do believe that's part of the issue as far as politicking and such. Not to mention that I'm not a fan of stifling innovation (though killing incentive to innovate) or sandbagging to get favorable adjustments from the sanctioning body for a particular race. This (though I'm sure it'll be controversial) is also why I'm in favor of Le Mans not being a points scoring round for the WEC. The race is totally unique, it's a 24 hour race (only race over 10 hours or 1000 miles on the WEC calendar currently), and the race overshadows the whole damn championship (which I don't like). Not to mention that a poor showing at LM can kill a championship run, while a good run at LM can cancel out a bad showing at a shorter race. I think that LM should be an All-Star race for the WEC and IMSA (and also even the LMS and AsLMS) that offers a big pay out and bigger bragging rights. Of course, the ACO and the FIA are going to have to front the cash (LM I know doesn't pay a huge purse whatsoever for winning). And as far as it relates to BOP, Le Mans is also a BOP nightmare, due to it overshadowing the whole championship, its uniqueness as a track, and LM, even now, is an almost "all or nothing" affair. IMO, BOP is a nightmare for the sanctioning bodies that use it. But as we all know, they're damned if they do, damned if they don't. Either way IMO, they can't win, and it's just the lesser of two evils at this stage. |
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17 Sep 2024, 10:49 (Ref:4227272) | #1336 | ||
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I’d like to know the end goal of the BOP, are we heading towards a situation where in one moment the whole grid will be deemed as “balanced” and then there can be no more changes, or are we still going to be doing these race by race changes merry go round ad infinitum?
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17 Sep 2024, 11:01 (Ref:4227273) | #1337 | |||
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For sure I'm firmly confident all this BoP stuff is an utter cr*p and has nothing in common with sports. You know all that allegories with 10kg shoes for Bolt and so on. If some companies are not able to construct a proper race car (even with the help of outsourcing) they shouldn't ask race organizers to make fools out of fans by trying to show that their hyppocars are really that fast. I have nothing against 2-3 real cars instead of 10 motorized show-mobiles. Yes, journalists have plenty to write about (all that average stuff about drivers and their thoughts) but it's clear for me that bopped racing is hit by devaluation of sense with a cosmic impulse. Are you orientated at the fan base that seeks for show? Who has said that they'll stick with racing forever and do not throw it away in a year or two when somebody delivers even more Entertaining show. Should ACO really organize some Reverse gear racing events to spice it up for more fans to come? I think that's the only way, because you've already grown a generation of fans who have watched bopped spec racing only. |
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ACO-Ratel-Lotti group of "entertainpreneurs" soon will make you think that Reverse-Gear-Racing is the most professional series in the world. "Faccio il pane con la farina che ho". |
17 Sep 2024, 12:22 (Ref:4227277) | #1338 | ||
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I'm sure the ACO were surprised with that considering their pre-LM performances and from their point of view it was obvious that the GR010 needed to be nerfed for COTA. So they did exactly that and what happened? Again Toyota the fastest but with a smaller margin vs Sao Paulo so the conclusion was simple - the change was right and more nerfing was needed. So they nerfed Toyota again for Fuji and what's more, this time they had last year data available for that track. And what happened last year? Toyota crushed the competition so this new BOP with Toyota having less favorable numbers vs Porsche/Ferrari than last year, seemed reasonable. In the end it turned out they got nerfed a bit too much but as I said before, we know that only after the race. To conclude, if Toyota sandbagged before LM, they got a funny reward for their funny games. If not, they just are the victim of circumstance. It happens, it's simply impossible to nail the BOP every single track for every single car so consistency is the key and Porsche are the ones consistent this year so they have their reward for that. I don't expect this to convince Boyota fans that BOP isn't fixed for Porsche and Ferrari and there isn't some secret conspiracy against the Japanese marque but well, I just don't see that suggested controversy. |
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17 Sep 2024, 12:59 (Ref:4227281) | #1339 | |||
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In theory the adjustments get less and less until it tends to zero, but that would take many many races. As an example movements tend to be more in newer cars. And there will be much noise in the data, and difficultly in analyzing. Data will be updated, models will be improved. So it will never completely go away. |
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17 Sep 2024, 17:53 (Ref:4227303) | #1340 | ||
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Also have to factor in car developments and changes. The bar will move every time there's a joker upgrade (which Porsche will be doing for next season), for example.
One area that I do agree with as far as race to race changes is that teams are allowed to introduce joker upgrades at basically any point in the season. So that throws a wrench in the plans for trying to have one main set BOP for a full season, or even just having 1 or maybe 2 windows for adjustments. And having Le Mans as a points paying round of the WEC and everything surrounding that race doesn't help with matters, either. |
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17 Sep 2024, 18:19 (Ref:4227304) | #1341 | |||
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Last edited by Articus; 17 Sep 2024 at 18:27. |
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17 Sep 2024, 20:35 (Ref:4227310) | #1342 | |||
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The ACO has changed its stance in interviews that the hypercar BoP should be about equalizing car potential, but then seemed to shift tone to saying maybe it should adjust for results. I no longer care to catalogue exactly which side of the bed they are waking up on as of late, so in this respect the ACO are not helping themselves manage the ideas that this has stirred up within fans. Earlier this year in a Vanthoor podcast where the brothers speak with one of the FIA officials involved in the BoP process, the guy says that making the BoP process entirely transparent would just bog down fan attention around something that isn't the on track action. Maybe that's true, but the situation we are in with now BoP is like VAR in football, where imperfect information just fuels even more rampant speculation. To that end, I have some sympathy for concepts like success ballast - while it may not be exactly sporting, at least it is transparent in its extreme simplicity, and the fans and teams all know beforehand what they signed on for and what to expect. Also, in choosing to base BoP on observed race pace or results - these two things aren't perfectly correlated, but aren't they at least related? It seems like choosing one can still give observers enough doubt that they can argue you've opted for the other. |
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17 Sep 2024, 21:01 (Ref:4227314) | #1343 | ||
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BoP. Brilliant or Pants.
Of course they are correlated. However it is the linking to results that is incorrect, especially when described as success ballast.
But yes, it doesn’t mean that people don’t falsely make that connection. People make false connections. If it wasn’t BoP it would be something else. As we have seen forever. The it’s not fair accusations aren’t that different to pretty much any decade. Henri could make a lot of noise. And the fans! They’ve never been happy, at least the ones on the internet. (That’s us). |
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17 Sep 2024, 23:52 (Ref:4227326) | #1344 | ||
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If the ACO publish the changes to BOP every time they make them, why are some here claiming this process lacks transparency? They collect gigabytes of data every round and see what each car is doing. Then they make adjustments to the very few parameters they can control to try and level the playing field. All the entrants knew this was the process before they agreed to make a car to enter.
I'm not sure how this differs from any other sport. Do fans expect to know what the people who run the series/league/tournament of any other sport think about every single aspect of managing the sport? This seems like we are asking to understand things in racing that management controls. They have no obligation to let us know this, do they? |
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17 Sep 2024, 23:59 (Ref:4227330) | #1345 | ||
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I agree.
I guess some are claiming that they need to know the formula, or whatever. It’s not going to work like that. It’ll be simulations, models and/or methods. There is zero benefit for the fan in releasing it. The vast majority, as in all but a handful, will get no insight from it. Will only take the wrong thing from it and say the same crap they would have said before and possibly would have said if there was no BoP. And there is an actual downside. There could well be real manipulation from the teams as they are in the handful who could find it useful. Even Peugeot. |
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18 Sep 2024, 02:24 (Ref:4227336) | #1346 | |||
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Quote:
One of my favorite sayings: Quote:
At the end of the day, across the entire season, there was no dominant manufacturer. Despite all the accusations of favoritism, nerfing, and so on, the leading manufacturers (Ferrari, Porsche, Toyota, and yes Cadillac) all had opportunities this season to make their mark in the championship hunt. The truth is Ferrari, Cadillac, and Toyota simply made too many mistakes compared to Porsche. Ferrari: Penalties in Qatar Strategy gaffe in Imola Fuji penalties, collisions, unreliabilty Toyota: Conway missing Le Mans for the 7 car, Lopez spinning 7 car fuel problems in Sao Paolo Kobayashi penalty in COTA. Buemi madman driving in COTA Fuji implosion Cadillac: Crashing at most races All of them had race weekends where their performance would allow them to win, even dominantly. The 6 Porsche is the only one who completed the entire season without low points. Last edited by Articus; 18 Sep 2024 at 02:39. |
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19 Sep 2024, 13:42 (Ref:4227449) | #1347 | ||
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An article that came out this morning that may provide some food for thought and perspectives on the for/against/how much BOP arguments:
https://www.theracingline.media/wec-...QAjy_qqWayHY9Q |
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19 Sep 2024, 14:27 (Ref:4227452) | #1348 | ||||||
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Thanks for the link.
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Added to that we get to see so much more of endurance racing now. Stuff that is not as important if one car is miles ahead. As mentioned in passing: Quote:
But my favorite bit: Quote:
What they are calling for is less transparency and the reason is that we can’t be trusted with that information. Which by and large is true. This bit is in contradiction to that: Quote:
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19 Sep 2024, 20:05 (Ref:4227473) | #1349 | |
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Sounds like self serving position of you don't know we get to pretend we know from inside info so you have to come to the media to get it and drives clicks/subscription. Or maybe I just don't trust any of those types that want to tell us what we can handle and limit it because arguing isn't good
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20 Sep 2024, 00:42 (Ref:4227489) | #1350 | ||
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You can’t handle the truth!
To be fair it is me saying people can’t handle it. There seems to be a lot of evidence for that. Although it is opposite from the line from A Few Good Men. We don’t have to go deep down here, the truth is rather dull. The truth is that there are some people analysing some data. They probably drink Perrier water. |
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