harty71 wrote: ↑16 Nov 2022, 20:20
AeroDynamic wrote: ↑16 Nov 2022, 19:48
SiLo wrote: ↑16 Nov 2022, 13:08
Not entirely sure Alonso is a good example of this. Lewis beat him over a season and realistically drove better as well. That's not to say Alonso wasn't also excellent in the second half of the season to claw back some points.
Alonso is a poor example. The standings say that they performed neck and neck. But in Alonso's own words, it took a "miracle" in one weekend to finish in front of Hamilton in Turkey and inherit his podium, and the other high profile misfortunes of Lewis towards the end such as Brazil and China aren't to be ignored.
The standings are only objective in that they quantify who enjoyed success and by how much on what weekend. They do not tell you why or how @Harty.
outright dominance by certain drivers are down to the team in some way, never to credit only the driver.
in the case of Lewis and George, George has been fantastic but theres a reason why many people who were gunning to hype him up as evidence of Lewis being a 'poor driver' went quiet and in fact started to turn on him and minimise his talent because he wasn't convincingly beating Lewis the times he did and was evidently falling into Lewis' shadow in the second half of the season.
Brazil weekend may be the first time he did it convincingly on track (that I can recall) without safety car-in the pit-overtakes or otherwise. Though there is still the variable of if there was any performance compromise for Lewis after his contact with Max earlier.
George did circumstantially take advantage out of his own qualifying blunder on the weekend though. These two can be so close in performance that DRS, qualifying position etc is a substantial factor in who will finish ahead between them.
It would be as intense as it was between Hamilton and Verstappen last year if it were for a title.
That I agree, there's been nothing between them all year. Still, that doesn't help Hamilton's profile, quite the opposite for me.
Should the greatest of all time be struggling so much with a driver in his first season in the team, not in my view.
It's a stretch calling someone the GOAT when it's not even apparent he's the best driver in his own team.
Seems you have an axe to grind with Lewis more than anything.
Its his first season in the team but its every drivers first season with these new cars, tyres and wheels.
I wouldn't quantify Lewis as struggling, certainly not in the second half of the season and only in terms of execution (not pace) in the first half of the season. The first half is marred by too many circumstantial elements and variables that were against Lewis on weekends -and inflated George's points haul in the standings several times beyond merit of actually beating Hamilton by his driving) but also against his intention. George is there to shine in his first season in a top fighting team. That's what hes more concerned with; not being in Lewis' shadow. Lewis on the other hand is in his finals years of F1 and is desperate to have the oppertunity to fight for titles before he retires.
The team were in a dire situation this year, in their quest to help him on that campaign with the W13 and himself and the team have taken it upon themselves to especially use his weekends to learn the car, gather data and get the ball rolling in fixing where they went wrong. Focusing on the big picture and getting the team back all the way to the top is where his mindset is.
George's is inevitably been on comfort with the car despite experiments, and getting best results because hes eager to prove he belongs in a top team and with Hamilton.
Its not a coincidence that as soon as Hamilton started to focus on his own performances some more, he started to stay ahead of George consistently.
For one reason or another (DRS failure in Hungary, Georges Spin in the Brazil Qualifying) George has circumstantially had the upper hand to deliver the better result on the weekends where Mercedes had their best shot at Pole, Victory etc. For whatever reason, pretty much all of Lewis' best shots have been undone by poorly timed safety cars (Silverstone, Zandvoort etc)
I just think people are quantifying too big of an opinion on either of them yet. As soon as George is in Lewis' shadow, hes no longer the promising top talent and future Champion. Soon as he has a good result, its back to hyping him up and using that to say Lewis is ordinary and not worthy of his success. It's quite irrational, What are we saying about Alonso if this ordinary driver so comfortably had Alonso under control as a Rookie? The only explanation for that is those irrational conspiracy theories Alonso peddled about sabotage.