zeph wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 23:09
Manoah2u wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 12:39
SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 02:12
Russell has not “earned” or “deserved” the Mercedes seat... Has he showed glimpses of great driving? Yes... But unluckily the points of reference with him aren’t great, not only has he driven so far in a car that definitely lacks in performance, but his team mates aren’t top tier drivers to be used as references of how much faster the Williams could actually go... He did had a great drive in Bahrain for Mercedes, but it was done in arguably the easiest layout ever in Formula 1, very hard to tell how good he really is from 1 race in a circuit layout that isn’t demanding for the drivers.
I don’t think he has done anything to earn or deserve the seat yet and just as he has showed some solid driving, he has also binned it in more than one occasion by mistakes of his own, he still needs to prove that the hype is real... Unluckily, unless we see him, not only in a better car, but against a more solid driver, we won’t really know if he is in that same group of top drivers.
I'll repeat. He was overtaking Bottas in the Mercedes P10 in a WILLIAMS that belongs in p17,18,19,20.
He gets his car in Q2 consistantly.
Has beaten his teammates EVERY weekend.
and was flaming fire in his first outing in a Merc.
but hey, Bottas deserves that seat more
Your assertion of what happened in Imola is uninformed.
https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/arti ... w-at-imola
yeah sure bud.
Russell was OVERTAKING bottas. for position. i suggest you start watching the races instead of reading biased reports.
The undeniable fact is Bottas underperforming that Mercedes. It's below sub-par.
Russell is outperforming that Williams. He's miles above what his teammates are able to extract (Kubica/Latifi).
Russell's Williams performances are very much those of Senna in the Toleman and Schumacher in the Jordan.
Bottas is just embarassing. Above all, the wet weather conditions more or less 'level' the field a bit and it comes much, much more down to the driver. And we all saw what a mess Bottas was making and how untouchable almost Russell was.
Whatever the case, the overtake @ tamburello went wrong. I don't think Russell is 100% to blame but i also dont think he's without blame. It would have been much wiser to back out right there and then, and go for the next opportunity.
He would have had him at the pit straight guaranteed the next lap.
Which means Russell would have 100% beaten Bottas AND swing in some points. It's also very likely that Hamilton would have lost his position to both Russell and Bottas after limping back home and there would have been no red flag. Since Russell was doing great on the tires, and Bottas horrible, it's also not unlikely that Bottas had to make yet another stop. So any threat from Bottas coming back would have been gone and at the very best Hamilton MIGHT have found himself closing in to Russell at the tail end of the race, but even that remains to be seen.
No matter how you put it, it was a bad weekend for Mercedes. The contact between Russell and Bottas made no difference to that.
It was not Russell's fault Bottas was driving like a worn towel and Hamilton careered off into the gravel trap.
Bottas still would have fallen further behind without a single doubt, and Hamilton would have not been able to come back to the podium without the red flag, so in all reality, Russell actually saved Mercedes' race and kept Hamilton ahead in the championship. And that's all with the certainty that had that collision not occurred, Russell would have beaten Bottas in any way you put it, in a Williams.
Russell would have finished AHEAD of Hamilton and AHEAD of Bottas.
Lame excuses and 'debriefings' dont change that fact one bit.