It would be good to make a comparison between Montoya and Ralf Schumacher, I don't remember which test driver, but I remember one of them saying that they both had different approaches and turned the same time in a lap.
@yarayaradaze When qualifying was in the 1 hour format Montoya got 10 poles to Schumachers 1 but when it switched to single lap format Montoya only got 1 pole but Schumacher got 4. I find it quite interesting that it shifted so much when the format changed. To me it suggests Montoyas ultimate speed was faster but Schumacher had more adaptability and consistency. Over a full season, Ralf outscored Montoya in the first two seasons but Montoya outscored Ralf in the final two seasons (however Montoya was very unlucky in the first season and Schumacher had injuries the third and fourth season).
@@mancantswim66191 Perhaps the difference was Ferrari at the time was doing unlimited testing compared to everyone else so they could test both a race setup and single-lap setup. Personally I felt Montoya had the ultimate raw pace (driver-wise) at the time.
When you look at the amount of success across multiple categories Juan Pablo Montoya had in his career, in an era that was so competitive for many of those categories, he undoubtedly has to be one of the greatest drivers of all time.
Montoya liked an understeery setup and his squirmy rear end on exits was a by product of power oversteer. Also confirmed by the fact he had to constantly correct and evens sometimes counter steer on the exit.
Not gonna lie,Maldonado could have done a lot more if he was less reckless,still,he is still Williams last GP Winner to date,no one is going to take that out of him.
hi man, gonna save the waffle for now, but im really interested in working with you, is there somewhere we can have a conversation? whether it be discord, email, ig, whatever. thanks
It would be good to make a comparison between Montoya and Ralf Schumacher, I don't remember which test driver, but I remember one of them saying that they both had different approaches and turned the same time in a lap.
He beat ralf by a good margin statistically right?
@yarayaradaze When qualifying was in the 1 hour format Montoya got 10 poles to Schumachers 1 but when it switched to single lap format Montoya only got 1 pole but Schumacher got 4. I find it quite interesting that it shifted so much when the format changed. To me it suggests Montoyas ultimate speed was faster but Schumacher had more adaptability and consistency.
Over a full season, Ralf outscored Montoya in the first two seasons but Montoya outscored Ralf in the final two seasons (however Montoya was very unlucky in the first season and Schumacher had injuries the third and fourth season).
@@mancantswim66191 Perhaps the difference was Ferrari at the time was doing unlimited testing compared to everyone else so they could test both a race setup and single-lap setup. Personally I felt Montoya had the ultimate raw pace (driver-wise) at the time.
When you look at the amount of success across multiple categories Juan Pablo Montoya had in his career, in an era that was so competitive for many of those categories, he undoubtedly has to be one of the greatest drivers of all time.
Montoya was a beast. His days in CART were proof enough. Just unfortunate that he was another talent chewed up and spat out by Williams at the time.
Montoya liked an understeery setup and his squirmy rear end on exits was a by product of power oversteer. Also confirmed by the fact he had to constantly correct and evens sometimes counter steer on the exit.
What a driver Montoya was incredible
I think Prime Montoya in F1 was just below Michael Schumacher in terms of raw pace: 2003 Monza Quali is a great example of that. Underrated driver.
Montoya is the définition of Fearless
That’s the driving style I’m influenced on lol
Now we need one explaining why he never gelled with the McLaren
Maldonado PLEASE
If you want to see true mastery look to the real goat, Rohrl. Circuit drivers get track and car to master, rally only get car
ngl man you gotta do one for maldonado
Definitely
@@WolfeF1Explained 👍
Not gonna lie,Maldonado could have done a lot more if he was less reckless,still,he is still Williams last GP Winner to date,no one is going to take that out of him.
If he had the right car like that hamilton he could always perform best
sooo basically a more agressive,less efficient michael schumacher?
Montoya broke as late as hamilton & was very agressive on the wheel. Textbook understeer driver
Dude drove when they still manually shifted. Time and racing have moved on.
hi man, gonna save the waffle for now, but im really interested in working with you, is there somewhere we can have a conversation? whether it be discord, email, ig, whatever. thanks