I think the drivers today have been split into two similar camps to what the thread is discussing - the "Pirelli are raw eggs" camp, and "no, they're not."
Crucially - for those who have been around since 2009 - I haven't heard them saying "it's better this way." To me most of them have the attitude, "We need to do the best with whatever is given. If we don't like it, then that's just another challenge to overcome." Which then to me indicates that they'd be ok with how it was before. Generally speaking the drivers never complained back in 2009 and previous years - yes car made a hell of a difference (and still does) but it was sort of accepted. You never heard drivers saying that.
So I don't really think that they'd have a problem with returning to how it was pre-Pirelli.
Honestly speaking - I'm not even calling for a return to 2009/2010 type rules/tyres. I don't think that's on the cards any time soon, and I'm resigned to that fact. But a return to 2011 would still be welcome. Yes, the driver I support was dominating, and that doesn't hurt my impressions of it - but that aside - the tyres had clear requirements. They weren't a mystery, like this year's tyres seem to be. You never really heard "I don't understand what the hell's happening with my tyres" last year, just drivers saying they couldn't make tyre X work, or whatever.
Ferrari for instance last year had issues on the medium and hard compounds, but they knew why. It wasn't a mystery to them why they couldn't switch them on. Last year Red Bull couldn't make the supersoft or soft work for long stints in high G-loading circuits such as Barcelona or Suzuka, but they understood why.
In a return to my desire for watching engineering excellence, last year, engineers were working to a known target. How they got to said target is a different matter. This year it seems everyone's in a dark room trying to shoot blanks at a cat that isn't there.
myurr wrote:Do we have viewing figures for that period. It'd be interesting to see if the fan base stayed the same, or if gains in Germany counter balanced losses elsewhere. Certainly there was a lot of noise around that era of how boring it was. How many fans watched out of loyalty to F1 gained during the 'glory years', rather than because it was so interesting during the Schumacher domination years?
Or it could just be that the quieter fans - those who just sat at home watching the races but didn't post on forums/tweet/whatever were the ones who liked it.
2010 was a close year, did you mean 2011?
I mean 2010 - there were very few overtakes in 2010 on the whole. Hence in a way it was more like the "laptime cold war" that I described above.