About Nasr, I think we might be underestimating him. First, because Sauber is way worst than the STR. And his car only behaves a little bit better in circuits that depend of PU. So its not his fault.Godius wrote:Nasr isn't in the same category as Verstapen and/or Sainz, Nasr only delivers on circuits that rely on Power Unit strenght.
True about Sigapore quali, but there are no points on saturdays, and he managed to score points finishing the race just behind Max (8th and 9th), despite he started 6 positions behindThumbsUp wrote:Andres, what about the crash in the wall in quali in Singapore, and what about the second spin in Sochi crashing into the barrier? I think they're both driver mistakes. So that would set them equal on mistakes during the race weekends. Also I don't think they are making that much mistakes. These 2 are the best rookies. They push eachother to great levels. Both are future Grand Prix winners. But you know my pick already.
I more or less agree with your view about drivers must stablish a brand to earn a seat in F1 because there are a lot of talented drivers, but I´d say Horner (or it was Marko?) claiming he´s the new Senna played a big role there.Edax wrote:The one goal of a rookie season is establish a brand on which to build you're further carrier. That one goes to Max. He still has to fulfill those expectations, but he has done a stellar job in creating them.
I guess we could say he was impressive in Australia, Singapore and Sochi. These are the races he showed great qualities. But we shall wait. He indeed didnt show that many things yet.ME4ME wrote: Nasr started the season with a great performance in Australia, but other than that I think his season has been mediocre to be honest. Ericsson was terrible last year, and started on the same low level this year, but has made a step forward, equaled, and even out-performed Nasr on occasions. I don't want to put Nasr in a negative spotlight here, cause his car is after all one of the slowest, but so far I'm not convinced he deserved any more than a midfield car.
I coundn't agree more. I'm a big fan of RAI and BUT, but, lets be honest: they wont be champions, they are not likely to win races and dont bring much excitement to me anymore. I'd me way more interested in see young drivers being tested in their seats.ME4ME wrote: The thing is, although F1 needs a couple of senior drivers, I think currently we have too many and the system is congested. Personally I would have been happy to see Button and Raikkonen leave at the end of the season and make place for other exciting rookies like Vandoorne, Magnussen or even Palmer to join.
I am very disappointed in Hulkenberg, he doesn't show why he deserves a top seat. A Le Mans win in a top car doesn't change that. I expected him to do a lot better and to make it even worse, when there is a chance for a podium, it's his team mate doing the job.ME4ME wrote:Very interesting debate.
Nasr started the season with a great performance in Australia, but other than that I think his season has been mediocre to be honest. Ericsson was terrible last year, and started on the same low level this year, but has made a step forward, equaled, and even out-performed Nasr on occasions. I don't want to put Nasr in a negative spotlight here, cause his car is after all one of the slowest, but so far I'm not convinced he deserved any more than a midfield car.
Verstappen and Sainz on the other hand have been absolutely spectacular. You can see the hunger for success in their approach to each weekend with total commitment. That's something we rarely see anymore - some drivers, like Hulkenberg to name one, seem to just go through the motions. The Toro Rosso boys add some strongly needed spice to the show. Sainz has surprised me with his performance in qualifying, he really does have great speed. What puts Max one step above for me is his killer instinct in races. To me he seems very similar to Alonso. WDC material.
As for the Manor drivers, I'm not particularly impressed with any of them. It's too early to judge Rossy though.
The thing is, although F1 needs a couple of senior drivers, I think currently we have too many and the system is congested. Personally I would have been happy to see Button and Raikkonen leave at the end of the season and make place for other exciting rookies like Vandoorne, Magnussen or even Palmer to join.
Doesn't matter if he got points on Sunday it was a driver mistake. Which you where talking about. Max started 8th had a glitch that switched off his car, was 1,5 lap behind and and set times that matched the front cars set the 3rd or 4th fastest lap and got points. Yes he was lucky with the safety car. But so was Sainz in Sochi.Andres125sx wrote: True about Sigapore quali, but there are no points on saturdays, and he managed to score points finishing the race just behind Max (8th and 9th), despite he started 6 positions behind
About Sochi, you can´t be serious. Maybe he should have stopped the car before doing the second spin because the brakes were done, but the race was finished because of a mechanical failure, not because of a driver mistake. You could say he broke a rear wing, but that´s all, it had no impact on the final result. And he proved to be brave, not many drivers will try to finish the race without brakes![]()
So he did one (big) mistake in the whole season, and scored points that weekend, very different to Max with his two retirements because of two crashes on his own
Yes it matters because we´re comparing them, so we must analyse the points they´ve scored, the points they´ve not scored because of car problems, and the points they´ve not scored because of their own mistakesThumbsUp wrote:Doesn't matter if he got points on Sunday it was a driver mistake.
So Sainz was lucky in a race his car didn´t finish, while Max was lucky after suffering problems and he could score points... Those are very different ways to be luckyThumbsUp wrote:Max started 8th had a glitch that switched off his car, was 1,5 lap behind and and set times that matched the front cars set the 3rd or 4th fastest lap and got points. Yes he was lucky with the safety car. But so was Sainz in Sochi.
But you keep ignoring that mistake didn´t cost anything because his race was finished and the mistake came when he tried to finish with a broken car. Very different to what we usually call a driver mistake wich costs a DNF to the teamThumbsUp wrote:And yes I'm serious about the second spin being a driver mistake. You may call it brave I call it just silly. As I said before that's how I see that single event that happened in his best race of the season.
Exactly, he suffered problems in quali but was able to solve it in sunday, as Carlos did after Singapore quali mistake but finished the race 9thThumbsUp wrote:Also Max had most of the mechanical issues during quali therefore he had to start most of the races on the backfoot and he still is ahead of him point wise.
Anytime Alonso is asked about who deserve a top seat in F1, he always says Hulkenberg. To be sincere I´ve never looked at him in detail, but drivers know better than anyone so I wouldn´t think he´s underperforming, maybe it´s Perez who is performing flawleslyMercedesAMGSpy wrote:I am very disappointed in Hulkenberg, he doesn't show why he deserves a top seat. A Le Mans win in a top car doesn't change that. I expected him to do a lot better and to make it even worse, when there is a chance for a podium, it's his team mate doing the job.
In China he was outside of the points. Singapore and Russia were his own fault.Andres125sx wrote:As I said didn´t look into it in detail, but Nico DNF 5 times for only 1 for the mexican.