NathanOlder wrote: ↑22 Jan 2020, 23:17
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Jan 2020, 22:33
izzy wrote: ↑22 Jan 2020, 22:18
it shows how "alpha" is too binary really, when in motor racing it's more a progressive scale of a dominant personality and Alpha=10 while Lewis and say Seb might be 8 or 9
"alpha" is a state of mind, not ability. It might also be called "diva".
Yeah definitely, having 2 great drivers in a team is perfect. You don't automatically become an alpha just because you are good. Maybe some are confusing 2 great drivers with 2 alpha drivers.
Surely an alpha driver is someone who basically wants it "my way or no way at all". Like Senna and Prost in 89.
Jenson and Lewis at Mclaren were just 2 great drivers in the team. Like Massa and Kimi in 07 & 08.
Alonso is 100% A proper alpha, Max seems to be setting himself up like that, although that may just be RedBull pushing it that way with making Max feel loved enough to sign a long term contract
I think it also rather depends on the pairing.
Max and Daniel were no 'alpha' / diva combination at all, apart from the fact that things can get 'a tad heated'.
I feel however that if you'd put Max and Charles together in 1 team, it would become quite a clash of 'divas'.
Vettel and Webber were an example of that same 'alpha/diva' behaviour.
Rosberg and Hamilton were an example of that too.
Hamilton and Bottas clearly aren't,
Vettel and Raikkonen weren't either,
and Sainz and Norris aren't either,
indeed Button and Hamilton weren't either.
where Ocon and Perez definately were.
As said, being a 'top talented' driver does not equal being a 'alphadiva'.
Hell, you don't even have to be in the same team.
Hamilton and Massa definately showed some alphadiva behaviour against eachother.
The alphadiva behaviour indeed is a risk and negative factor for a team if not controlled properly,
and will surely 'cost' the team itself effort to steer into the right directions so you won't see a Chernobyl meltdown.
Button and Hamilton once 'clashed' aswell in Canada, but there was no diva behaviour there.
Rosberg and Hamilton clashed (more than once) and it got real ugly, and i'm not even delving into Alonso.
That said, the combo Hamilton and Rosberg did show just how murderously dominating that pairing was.
The harmony between Hamilton and Bottas is much, much better, but i think it's safe to say that the competition between eachother is far less than it was with Rosberg, not the least because i feel Rosberg was a faster and better racer than Bottas.
Personally, i have the feeling Ocon isn't the 'wunderchild' some people claim, but i think he definately fits the 'Diva' label, and it would bring similar situations as with Rosberg but then without Rosberg's 'better' performance.
Yes i'm saying this without a real proper view on Ocon and more of a gut feeling, so don't make more of that please.
If i'd compare that to pairing Hamilton against Daniel Ricciardo, with DannyRic imho not fitting the 'Diva' description at all, then i think that pairing could and probably would be just as harmoneous as with Bottas right now, but at the same time, i very much concider Ricciardo a much faster and better racer than Bottas, which i'd say see beneficial results for both the team and drivers.
I'd personally concider Verstappen's chances on a WDC fight quite less when he's up against Hamilton and Ricciardo, versus being up against Hamilton and Bottas, with the latter simply not being 'strong' enough against Max, where Daniel definately is.
So with that in mind, i honestly think Mercedes would do better by hiring a guy like Ricciardo over Bottas.
In the same breath, i have the -gut- feeling that if you'd pair Max to Lewis in the same team, we could end up with Hamilton-Rosberg scenes, and that would give LeClerc, or perhaps even Albon in a strong RBR-Honda, 'suddenly' a serious shot at the title.
Long story short: Yes, two alphadiva's in a team isn't the best option. Two topdrivers in the same team definately IS.