Good point. I remember Alonso always used to complain on the radio if he got stuck behind Massa. And rightly so. He knew he was too far ahead in the points and already had his mind on the championship from day 1. He forced the team to make the decision in their best interests.LM10 wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 21:27Dragging a lesser car around is one thing, dragging a lesser car and a lesser team another.NathanOlder wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 21:08So Ferrari need a driver capable of dragging a lesser car around to mount a decent title challenge. Vettel is no good at all for that. Fernando on the other hand....
Vettel definitely needs to sort some things out, but so does his team. Even in Vettel’s crash in Germany the team played a significant role, in my opinion. Knowing that Hamilton would be clearly faster than the rest in wet conditions, they should have let Vettel pass Kimi way before instead of holding him up. This way the pressure on Vettel would have not been unnecessarily big.
The only evidence you have is that he’s better than Vandoorne. No benchmark.GrayGreat wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 21:41Even at that, Fernando will be miles ahead of Vettel, as evidenced by his stint at McLaren.LM10 wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 21:27Dragging a lesser car around is one thing, dragging a lesser car and a lesser team another.NathanOlder wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 21:08So Ferrari need a driver capable of dragging a lesser car around to mount a decent title challenge. Vettel is no good at all for that. Fernando on the other hand....
Vettel definitely needs to sort some things out, but so does his team. Even in Vettel’s crash in Germany the team played a significant role, in my opinion. Knowing that Hamilton would be clearly faster than the rest in wet conditions, they should have let Vettel pass Kimi way before instead of holding him up. This way the pressure on Vettel would have not been unnecessarily big.
he was generally quicker than button?LM10 wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 22:00The only evidence you have is that he’s better than Vandoorne. No benchmark.GrayGreat wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 21:41Even at that, Fernando will be miles ahead of Vettel, as evidenced by his stint at McLaren.LM10 wrote: ↑17 Oct 2018, 21:27
Dragging a lesser car around is one thing, dragging a lesser car and a lesser team another.
Vettel definitely needs to sort some things out, but so does his team. Even in Vettel’s crash in Germany the team played a significant role, in my opinion. Knowing that Hamilton would be clearly faster than the rest in wet conditions, they should have let Vettel pass Kimi way before instead of holding him up. This way the pressure on Vettel would have not been unnecessarily big.
well Kimi was new in the team. Didn't even had his inputs on early car development (during 2013 season). Based on plots we see that Kimi isn't that special anymore, and combine this with fact that he had car that was not suited to his driving style and we get that massive difference. But put Alonso in 2017,2018 beside Kimi and it won get that bad. Vettel in his first season with Ferrari (same as for Kimi) nailed him. What about that? everyone is mentioning 2014 and how Alonso is the greatest based on that gap. Come on.
If true, that would pretty much be the end of his career.
It says at he end of 2019bosyber wrote: ↑18 Oct 2018, 10:59Have to say, I'm sceptical (also given the source); And I am not so sure that it would be a great way to go. So they get Alonso then? Which means that Leclerc has a very political and often destabilising teammate in his first year in the big league - so that's a damper on him; the team has gotten their car this way by not firing people every few races if things didn't go their way; I think Vettel's mistakes have come from feeling pressured to bring results bc. he didn't feel the team gave him everything he needed (not saying that's quite true) - the best way to go would be to sit him down, say it's clear as a team Ferrari isn't going to win it this year, now they need to calm down, get the best results for the rest of the year, and let's focus on delivering consistently good weekends, together.
But, granted, not sure Ferrari is the team that can, eh, consistently do that, esp. if rumours of leadership struggles are true.
I assume the the clause would be a direct comparison to his teammate. it's already been said that Leclerc is seen as Ferrari's future. Thus, if he beats Vettel next year, or is very close to him, I could see Vettel potentially being dropped. It would clear a potential seat for Giovinazzi, and would also free up a lot of money.
“When you make choices like this, that are related to the driver, you don’t only have to make a short-term commitment but a long-term one,” Arrivabene said.
“We are not only looking ahead to next year, we are looking into the future, that being the future of the team.
“This was a decision taken by me, discussed with the top management and taking into consideration many, many factors. It has nothing to do with the respect I have for Kimi as both a human being and as a driver,” he added of the 38-year-old Finn.
“If you have to make a choice about the future of the team then I think we made the right one for us and for Kimi, who we appreciate for everything he has done for us and wish him the best for the future.”