Could it be to try and maintain their sponsorship and marketing value? George is fast but no where near the name recognition of Verstapen.organic wrote:For me: if Mercedes/Toto believed Russell was close to Verstappen's level, they would not bother going so far to court him and end up spending upwards of 100mln euros per year. I think this alone shows that Russell is probably not at the sufficient level yet given the teams have plenty of data. They'd be happy with Russell/Sainz if Russell really was 'the' guy.
I am sure they have plenty of data for George, but do they have any data for Max driving W13 or 14 or 15? Unless it's a feeling, there is no scientific way of measuring 2 drivers that are in different machineries. Mercedes has always shown intent to sign 2 strong drivers. Getting Max can have multiple benefits. Weakinng Red Bull and strengthening Mercedes goes hand in hand. I said this before, Great cars flatter a driver's abilities and Max could yet be another Seb outside of Red Bull, until proven otherwise. I sincerely hope not.organic wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 01:35For me: if Mercedes/Toto believed Russell was close to Verstappen's level, they would not bother going so far to court him and end up spending upwards of 100mln euros per year. I think this alone shows that Russell is probably not at the sufficient level yet given the teams have plenty of data. They'd be happy with Russell/Sainz if Russell really was 'the' guy.
Yeah all of Max's cars have been great recency bias is crazyDunlay wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 03:51I am sure they have plenty of data for George, but do they have any data for Max driving W13 or 14 or 15? Unless it's a feeling, there is no scientific way of measuring 2 drivers that are in different machineries. Mercedes has always shown intent to sign 2 strong drivers. Getting Max can have multiple benefits. Weakinng Red Bull and strengthening Mercedes goes hand in hand. I said this before, Great cars flatter a driver's abilities and Max could yet be another Seb outside of Red Bull, until proven otherwise. I sincerely hope not.organic wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 01:35For me: if Mercedes/Toto believed Russell was close to Verstappen's level, they would not bother going so far to court him and end up spending upwards of 100mln euros per year. I think this alone shows that Russell is probably not at the sufficient level yet given the teams have plenty of data. They'd be happy with Russell/Sainz if Russell really was 'the' guy.
Remind me, were people saying Max is the GOAT 4 years ago when his car was mediocre?organic wrote: Yeah all of Max's cars have been great recency bias is crazy
It was suggested that Max hasn't proven that he doesn't need great cars to be good. Yet he has driven less-than-great cars for majority of his career in F1. 6 seasons from 2015-2020. And during that time was considered a generational talent already by many who I would consider more knowledgeable and experienced than you - Marko, Lauda, wolff, brundle etc
organic wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 04:24It was suggested that Max hasn't proven that he doesn't need great cars to be good. Yet he has driven less-than-great cars for majority of his career in F1. 6 seasons from 2015-2020. And during that time was considered a generational talent already by many who I would consider more knowledgeable and experienced than you - Marko, Lauda, wolff, brundle etc
Even before he'd turned a wheel on F1 all of the top orgs (Ferrari, RB, Merc) were bending over backwards for him. So the writing was on the wall in terms of talent level.
All of this has been proven in crappy cars. But I'm saying the recency bias is that recently he hasn't had to deal with that so it's easily forgotten /discounted!
I just don't see a seb situation being possible. Seb was pushed close at times by Webber who is a decent driver but I think everyone would agree not brilliant. The signs were there already, and I think the way that other drivers like Hamilton/Alonso regarded him at the time told a story. You don't see that disdain from other drivers now - if anything the opposite. The likes of ham, Russell, Lec recognize that max is the benchmark
For fans that may be so. We don't have the same kind of data and insight as the teams, we also have all kinds of silly biases and internal fanboy narratives to cater to. But for the teams who are in the business of making decisions that are objectively advantageous for themselves, they will know which drivers are at the top of their wishlist. It would not have been a surprise for Ferrari to discover the greatness of MSC, despite the fact that he ran over his not so great teammates at Benetton.dialtone wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 04:42I've never said Max isn't good. You don't need to scroll that much back to see me defending him.
But recency bias on his performance is a real thing and the first 6 years of his career were good but nothing GOAT-like, say compared to Sainz or judging by the number of totally brainless incident and crashes he was involved in or started.
That being said he's obviously a great driver, I'm not here to disparage him, but it's extremely hard to tell car from driver across teams.
It has worked both ways. Seb was a proven winner, but failed at Ferrari and got dumped. McLaren had great hopes from Ricciardo and we know the end result. Considered as a genuinely great talent, Kimi was hired by Ferrari to replace MSC and after one decent season of winning the title, he faded and was thrown out. He was hired again after really good performances in Renault, only to end up as a wingman for Alonso and Seb. Aren't they proof enough that teams get it wrong? There are so many such examples.Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 08:56For fans that may be so. We don't have the same kind of data and insight as the teams, we also have all kinds of silly biases and internal fanboy narratives to cater to. But for the teams who are in the business of making decisions that are objectively advantageous for themselves, they will know which drivers are at the top of their wishlist. It would not have been a surprise for Ferrari to discover the greatness of MSC, despite the fact that he ran over his not so great teammates at Benetton.dialtone wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 04:42I've never said Max isn't good. You don't need to scroll that much back to see me defending him.
But recency bias on his performance is a real thing and the first 6 years of his career were good but nothing GOAT-like, say compared to Sainz or judging by the number of totally brainless incident and crashes he was involved in or started.
That being said he's obviously a great driver, I'm not here to disparage him, but it's extremely hard to tell car from driver across teams.
You get the best guy available. That isn't always going to result in MSC to Ferrari or Lewis to Merc, those top guys only come on the market every so often. The point is Max is that guy now, the driver every team would like to sign if they had their pick of the litter, he just hasn't been available until now (if we trust the rumours). Kimi to Ferrari, Seb to Ferrari, perfect examples of signing the best driver available but not necessarily the guy at the top of the wishlist. After all, Alonso was not available for 2007 and Hamilton was not available for 2015.Dunlay wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 09:49It has worked both ways. Seb was a proven winner, but failed at Ferrari and got dumped. McLaren had great hopes from Ricciardo and we know the end result. Considered as a genuinely great talent, Kimi was hired by Ferrari to replace MSC and after one decent season of winning the title, he faded and was thrown out. He was hired again after really good performances in Renault, only to end up as a wingman for Alonso and Seb. Aren't they proof enough that teams get it wrong? There are so many such examples.Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 08:56For fans that may be so. We don't have the same kind of data and insight as the teams, we also have all kinds of silly biases and internal fanb*y narratives to cater to. But for the teams who are in the business of making decisions that are objectively advantageous for themselves, they will know which drivers are at the top of their wishlist. It would not have been a surprise for Ferrari to discover the greatness of MSC, despite the fact that he ran over his not so great teammates at Benetton.dialtone wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 04:42I've never said Max isn't good. You don't need to scroll that much back to see me defending him.
But recency bias on his performance is a real thing and the first 6 years of his career were good but nothing GOAT-like, say compared to Sainz or judging by the number of totally brainless incident and crashes he was involved in or started.
That being said he's obviously a great driver, I'm not here to disparage him, but it's extremely hard to tell car from driver across teams.
I absolutely agree that teams want to hire the driver that is currently doing the best job in the given equipment. That still doesn't mean that driver can succeed in a new team as proven by different drivers. I would love to see a match up of Max and George.Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 15:16You get the best guy available. That isn't always going to result in MSC to Ferrari or Lewis to Merc, those top guys only come on the market every so often. The point is Max is that guy now, the driver every team would like to sign if they had their pick of the litter, he just hasn't been available until now (if we trust the rumours). Kimi to Ferrari, Seb to Ferrari, perfect examples of signing the best driver available but not necessarily the guy at the top of the wishlist. After all, Alonso was not available for 2007 and Hamilton was not available for 2015.Dunlay wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 09:49It has worked both ways. Seb was a proven winner, but failed at Ferrari and got dumped. McLaren had great hopes from Ricciardo and we know the end result. Considered as a genuinely great talent, Kimi was hired by Ferrari to replace MSC and after one decent season of winning the title, he faded and was thrown out. He was hired again after really good performances in Renault, only to end up as a wingman for Alonso and Seb. Aren't they proof enough that teams get it wrong? There are so many such examples.Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 08:56
For fans that may be so. We don't have the same kind of data and insight as the teams, we also have all kinds of silly biases and internal fanb*y narratives to cater to. But for the teams who are in the business of making decisions that are objectively advantageous for themselves, they will know which drivers are at the top of their wishlist. It would not have been a surprise for Ferrari to discover the greatness of MSC, despite the fact that he ran over his not so great teammates at Benetton.
Teams dont get the best guy avalible. a quick look at the grid shows that.Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 15:16You get the best guy available. That isn't always going to result in MSC to Ferrari or Lewis to Merc, those top guys only come on the market every so often. The point is Max is that guy now, the driver every team would like to sign if they had their pick of the litter, he just hasn't been available until now (if we trust the rumours). Kimi to Ferrari, Seb to Ferrari, perfect examples of signing the best driver available but not necessarily the guy at the top of the wishlist. After all, Alonso was not available for 2007 and Hamilton was not available for 2015.Dunlay wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 09:49It has worked both ways. Seb was a proven winner, but failed at Ferrari and got dumped. McLaren had great hopes from Ricciardo and we know the end result. Considered as a genuinely great talent, Kimi was hired by Ferrari to replace MSC and after one decent season of winning the title, he faded and was thrown out. He was hired again after really good performances in Renault, only to end up as a wingman for Alonso and Seb. Aren't they proof enough that teams get it wrong? There are so many such examples.Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2024, 08:56
For fans that may be so. We don't have the same kind of data and insight as the teams, we also have all kinds of silly biases and internal fanb*y narratives to cater to. But for the teams who are in the business of making decisions that are objectively advantageous for themselves, they will know which drivers are at the top of their wishlist. It would not have been a surprise for Ferrari to discover the greatness of MSC, despite the fact that he ran over his not so great teammates at Benetton.