I want to put a concrete argument on the table so people can disagree with specifics instead of just reacting to the title. The topic is safety car timing, and the specific angle is how recent form can mislead if we ignore context. I am not trying to make a tiny throwaway post here; I want a full thread that gives other users enough material to argue with, extend, or correct. Over the last ten days the surface story has moved quickly, but the underlying shape is slower: people react to the visible moment, then the numbers and incentives catch up later.
My current read is that tyre degradation is carrying more explanatory weight than most comments give it. If you only look at the final score, final price, or final clip, it is easy to say the outcome was obvious. But if you line up the sequence before the result, you can see several points where the decision tree could have gone the other direction. That is why I would rate this thesis at about 74% confidence instead of pretending it is settled.
The interesting part is not only the headline result; it is the chain of small decisions that made the result feel predictable afterward. The checklist I would use is: 1. tyre degradation; 2. undercut windows; 3. safety car timing; 4. driver confidence; 5. race pace. Those factors are not equal. The first two are usually leading indicators, the middle one tells you whether the read is already priced in, and the last two show whether the situation can survive contact with real pressure. When people disagree in the replies, I hope they say which part of that chain they reject, because that is much more useful than saying something is simply good or bad.
There is also a timing issue. A lot of communities overreact to the most recent event, especially when it produced a dramatic visual or a clean stat line. I think the better question is whether safety car timing has changed structurally or whether we are seeing a temporary swing caused by schedule, fatigue, matchup, or market attention. If it is structural, the next similar event should confirm it. If it is temporary, we should see regression as soon as the environment normalizes.
There is a difference between a lucky outcome and a repeatable pattern, and this example sits right on that border. My practical conclusion: I would not chase the loudest version of this narrative yet. I would watch the next two comparable samples, compare them against the baseline from earlier in the week, and only then raise confidence. For discussion, I am especially interested in three things: what evidence would make you abandon the current consensus, what smaller signal you think is being ignored, and whether you think the community is early or late on this read.