I'm not blessed with a D850 nor have I used Capture One. I will say this: one size fits all sharpening may not fit all images. Sharpening is lousy: too much sharpening can destroy fine detail. The higher the resolution of the camera, the sharper the lens, the tigher the shooting technique the more fine detail there is to loose. I use small radius sharpening on fine detail. Coarse detail may need stronger sharpening. Areas with no detail should get no sharpening. Finally I remove in camera sharpening in post and do little or no sharpening until I'm creating an image as final output.
My final image comes from Photoshop. After almost all other post processing is done I duplicate the image flatened. Next I duplicate the base layer and do no sharpening to the base layer. The second layer I call "Sharp." I may sharpen it a bit too much. Now I'll fade the opacity for the "Sharp" layer for the intended use. When down sampling I do the sharping in stages along with the down sampling. I sharpen first, then down sample. I find down sample with sharpening too crude. The last thing is convert to sRGB color space and then to 8 bit. Now I save a JPG as final output.
Dave Hartman who wants software that reads his mind like a magazine and does just what pleases him.