Yes. With all the investments made by Ferrari and Mercedes they are obliged to use their own drivers for their “junior/no2/driver next to their star” seat.
He would need to wait until the spot of Vettel of Hamilton comes available
Yes. With all the investments made by Ferrari and Mercedes they are obliged to use their own drivers for their “junior/no2/driver next to their star” seat.
Neither team have promoted their young drivers for the entirity of the PU era, or years before for that matter... What makes you think they're about to start now?
Haas for sure. Grosjean is living on borrowed time...
Well... actually.... members from the Mercedes junior program were: Schumacher, Hamilton and Rosberg, while Bottas was managed by one of the owners and manager of the team. Wolff already said they are going to look in their own pool for any next driver.AJI wrote: ↑11 Jun 2018, 12:18Neither team have promoted their young drivers for the entirity of the PU era, or years before for that matter... What makes you think they're about to start now?
Ironically, RB is the only team to do it, but RIC and VES will probably be team mates for 2 more years anyway.
The Bianchi tragedy pretty much slowed the Ferrari school a couple of years, i also think he would've gotten the call.Jolle wrote: ↑11 Jun 2018, 14:53
Well... actually.... members from the Mercedes junior program were: Schumacher, Hamilton and Rosberg, while Bottas was managed by one of the owners and manager of the team. Wolff already said they are going to look in their own pool for any next driver.
For Ferrari it's a bit more complicated. I don't think their program is that old yet. Perez was in it but skipped to McLaren and before that we had Massa of course, via a internship at Sauber.
A very good chance Jules Bianci would have been in the Ferrari by now.
And after all these years and investments, what else would be the point of having those programs?
Yes, dispite everyone’s criticism (especially around here), Verstappen is who everyone wants. He would be a replacement for either Vettel or Hamilton when they call it (almost) quits.Sevach wrote: ↑11 Jun 2018, 16:04The Bianchi tragedy pretty much slowed the Ferrari school a couple of years, i also think he would've gotten the call.Jolle wrote: ↑11 Jun 2018, 14:53
Well... actually.... members from the Mercedes junior program were: Schumacher, Hamilton and Rosberg, while Bottas was managed by one of the owners and manager of the team. Wolff already said they are going to look in their own pool for any next driver.
For Ferrari it's a bit more complicated. I don't think their program is that old yet. Perez was in it but skipped to McLaren and before that we had Massa of course, via a internship at Sauber.
A very good chance Jules Bianci would have been in the Ferrari by now.
And after all these years and investments, what else would be the point of having those programs?
Mercedes will have to consider Ocon seriously when they make their next move, when it was time to replace Rosberg he just hadn't shown enough which made Wolff go for his former protegé (although not a Mercedes jr, a Toto jr lol).
However, i think Toto wouldn't pass on Verstappen if the opportunity appeared, i mean he wanted Max too back in the day, he just couldn't match Red Bull's offer of immediate F1 seat.
Guys like him(filth rich) just don't let things go.
Man, I said 'years', not forever... It's 2018.Jolle wrote: ↑11 Jun 2018, 14:53Well... actually.... members from the Mercedes junior program were: Schumacher, Hamilton and Rosberg...
And after all these years and investments, what else would be the point of having those programs?
Yes that's true, Golf has a lot of randomness, there is often someone who has a <0.5% chance of winning (as defined by the bookmaking market) winning on the weekend, and even the favourite often starts with only a 15% or worse chance of winning. It's my observation only, but I feel in golf there is less fan passion for individual players and people who watch just watch for overall entertainment, compared to F1.Fulcrum wrote: ↑09 Jun 2018, 14:50Golf. Seems fairly popular.zac510 wrote: ↑09 Jun 2018, 13:29Show me any sport where 'any team/player/driver can win on any day'.. It'll be a sport with loads of randomness, so that great players can get unlucky and average players can get lucky enough to switch positions before the time runs out.
But people don't like too much randomness, they'll either rebel and de-legitimatise it (ie "Maldonado's win was just because of the tyres") or just reduce the emotional attachment to it (ie MLB Baseball "there are still 120 more games left this year, this one doesn't matter").
Hartley gets replaced by Matsushita 100%. Perhaps even before the season is over.
And at that point in time, Verstappen would be available on the market. Who would you hire? A Short time prospect with a 31 year old OR a long term prospect with a 23 year old!
Does he even have his super license yet?
Until he got wiped out by stroll, Hartley was having a great weekend in Canada. If that wasn't a one off, I'd say he'll be staying.
I assume his main job this year is making 310 km per race to get data on the Honda PU. Performance is secondary. They already knew years ago he isn’t RBR material.djos wrote: ↑12 Jun 2018, 23:02Until he got wiped out by stroll, Hartley was having a great weekend in Canada. If that wasn't a one off, I'd say he'll be staying.