tim|away wrote:As far as choosing Magnussen over Cheko is concerned, you have to put all emotions to the side for a moment.
- The fact that McLaren failed to provide an adequate car this year doesn't disable them from evaluating their drivers.
- Formula1 has never been about fairness. It has always been a ruthless competition and only the best will make it.
- As armchair critics (myself included), our judgement of Cheko's performance relative to Button is extremely limited - we certainly do not know better than McLaren themselves who have all the data.
- A driver's performance is almost certainly not determined by a single race, but as a global metric over the whole year.
- Apart from current performance, McLaren would also estimate what could be possible (i.e. hidden potential). At this point, they feel Magnussen has more potential going forward than Cheko.
- I do not know how the evaluation process works in detail (i.e. what sort of data is collected, how it's weighed, how representative it is, etc.). If anyone has any insight into this, I am sure I wouldn't be the only one reading that with great interest.
Given the above, I personally can't blame McLaren for their decision. In fact, it seems the only logical choice in a data-driven world like Formula1. I would love to question the accuracy of those datapoints to esimate a driver's hidden potential, but without knowing anything about the methodology I can't argue that either.
This is basically saying that whatever F1 team does is right, IMO also a proof that their selling the situation through senior sources leaks and shaping public's opinion that way worked. Magnussen might be a great talent, potentially faster than Perez, fine, but he's as ready as Ricciardo/Vergne when they entered F1.
What happened to their evaluation methods you have so much faith in when they were hiring Kova, Perez or keeping J.B. because you can't criticise Perez in his first season without Button getting caught in it. They were on similar level. I'd add to that examples from the past when great drivers weren't performing when McL didn't want them too and say that if the car was half decent it might have looked differently.
Speaking of evaluation, this is the third top team that skipped Hulkenberg. They clearly know more than media and net over-hyping him

, so Raikkonen, Magnussen, Ricciardo are better. Hulkenberg shouldn't worry since Lotus got another clueless owner liking hype, along with some money, to choose drivers instead of technical staff and management. Tempting spotlight but you have to pay for it later on sporting and financial level, not everyone is smart enough to leave it to Briatore.
Ecclestone promised Brazilian and "his" team hired one but where is Maldo moving, Force India? Sideways move. Replacing who, hopefully not Di Resta, he can keep Hamilton behind better than Hulk so he's clearly a superstar and deserves to be in F1.