DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 19:57
Sphere3758 wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 19:24
DiogoBrand wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 18:46
You're right.
From all of Ferrari's decisions, picking Leclerc over Sainz is perhaps the least questionable of them all.
It's just that, even though Leclerc scored more points, Sainz makes his limitations appear more obvious: He is far more talented than Carlos, but often unable to capitalize on that.
To me the most worryng of all are his poor performances seemingly from lack of mental resilience, like constantly crashing the car on his own, often in situations of high pressure, which really makes me wonder if he is able to fight for a championship, unless given a far superior car than everyone else.
As for the decision to hire Hamilton in the first place, I can't understand that as well.
It's not like it's the drivers costing Ferrari their performances, and Hamilton may create more issues than he solves, like increased wages, as well as the fact that, as demonstrated by Hamilton vs Alonso, Hamilton vs Rosberg and Leclerc vs Vettel, both drivers aren't okay with being number 2. And I'm pretty sure that, by the time the honeymoon is over and Hamilton realizes Ferrari won't be able to bring him another title, the situation can only get worse.
Regarding your first point, that is just not true. He has just had the luck of the draw in a few crucial situations. Like today, where he outqualified Charles for the first time in 8 races and Redbull decide to have an off day. But on the contrary, Charles would have beaten Max on pure pace in Vegas but the universe conspired a safety car for him at the worse possible time. I wouldnt even dignify the rest of that with an answer, go check who amongst the two crashed the car last.
Regarding Lewis, the decision is a lot more nuanced and a way for Ferrari to attract more British engineers to move to the team. They want to create a powerhouse team to attract engineering talent. Whether you believe it or not, the teams certainly rate Lewis a lot higher than Carlos and they have the data to back it. Engineers would find the prospect of designing a car for Lewis Hamilton a lot more exciting than for Carlos Sainz, that is the truth
I like the fact that you made some really good points, but the part about Leclerc being prone to accidents you won't dignify with an answer because apparently he was not the last of the two to have a crash.
A bit too tired (and lazy) to list things to be honest. Compared to Max, I would agree that Charles needs to up his consistency (with the caveat that a lot of his inconsistency is team related) if he wants to challenge for a title in a close race. But Carlos is not consistent at all, dude had a decent consistent stretch from Zandvoort to Singapore last year, but was highly inconsistent before and after.
Charles has had one major race error in over 2 years, in France 2022. He had a small incident at Imola 2022 and a first lap incident at Australia 23. You can even find 2 examples for Max having incidents like the last 2 in the same timeframe. So while France 2022 was very bad, you make it sound like he crashes all the time. Sainz has had more errors in the races in the same timeframe btw.
This is just from a simple google search for 2023:
https://imgur.com/HfdYm1L
Yes, he has had a couple of qualifying crashes last year, but those were before Ferrari realized the issue they had with their floor which was highly inconsistent with a oversteery setup. This was one of those cases where the issues were being detected on track, it would be harsh to completely blame those on Charles.