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  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    wrote on last edited by
    #306

    This is a great move.

    Ferrari is F1.

    He will want to be competitive of course, but every great driver should have the Tifosi cheering for them.

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #307

    @MajorRage said in Formula 1:

    This is a great move.

    Ferrari is F1.

    He will want to be competitive of course, but every great driver should have the Tifosi cheering for them.

    Great PR move for both parties I'd say

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to canefan on last edited by
    #308

    @canefan said in Formula 1:

    @MajorRage said in Formula 1:

    This is a great move.

    Ferrari is F1.

    He will want to be competitive of course, but every great driver should have the Tifosi cheering for them.

    Great PR move for both parties I'd say

    Ferrari don't need PR, they require a decent car and less donkeys doing strategy. I can't see what they get from this equation seeing as they need professionalism in strategy and at developing a car.

    DuluthD 1 Reply Last reply
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  • DuluthD Offline
    DuluthD Offline
    Duluth
    replied to antipodean on last edited by Duluth
    #309

    @antipodean said in Formula 1:

    they require a decent car and less donkeys doing strategy

    ..and drivers who crash less often

    Leclerc is a very good driver but he admitted he was on the wrong side of the risk/reward balance last year

    Sainz has always been sloppy both in the race and qualifying. He seems to get into a lot of first lap incidents too (even if they don't cause a DNF)

    I'm not a Hamilton fan but his consistency is undeniable

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to Duluth on last edited by
    #310

    @Duluth said in Formula 1:

    @antipodean said in Formula 1:

    they require a decent car and less donkeys doing strategy

    ..and drivers who crash less often

    His stats need to be viewed from the prism of a dominant car for multiple seasons. Of the drivers from last year, Max and ironically Sainz are the only ones with a season without a DNF.

    DuluthD 1 Reply Last reply
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  • DuluthD Offline
    DuluthD Offline
    Duluth
    replied to antipodean on last edited by
    #311

    @antipodean

    Sorry, I added to my post as you were quoting it

    I think Sainz was probably on the way out even if Hamilton wasn't available

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to Duluth on last edited by
    #312

    @Duluth said in Formula 1:

    @antipodean

    Sorry, I added to my post as you were quoting it

    All good, the inevitable consequence of a much required function.

    I think Sainz was probably on the way out even if Hamilton wasn't available

    Possibly, in any other team he'd be near unsackable with his results and name, coupled with Alonso's imminent departure so Spanish sponsors would have a natural heir.

    And my comment shouldn't read as downplaying Hamilton's undoubted abilities, but this would've made more sense to me a few years ago. Not that it makes much sense to me now unless Ferrari got out the calculator and worked out they might've secured second place in last years' constructor's championship.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    wrote on last edited by
    #313

    There is a lot of farewell career feeling to this one.

    I think driving for Ferrari will always be the ultimate in F1, regardless of how they are going. And I think Hamilton just wants to tick this bucket list. If the team was exactly the same (people, results, cars etc) but called Renault, does anybody think he would have moved? I certainly don't.

    I predict one of two ways.

    1. Ferrari suck and Hamilton just can't get it together for them. Contract done after a year
    2. Hamilton gets 1-2 wins and realises he has completed his bucket list in F1, with that the drive to continue starts to ease off and he retires.

    If I was him, I'd be doing exactly the same move. Mercedes, Red Bull may be the dominant players and best out teams out there.

    But they aren't, and never will be, Scuderia Ferrari.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • DuluthD Offline
    DuluthD Offline
    Duluth
    wrote on last edited by
    #314

    First race was a bit of a continuation of last year

    Media talking about some dull scandal

    M 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • M Offline
    M Offline
    Machpants
    replied to Duluth on last edited by
    #315

    @Duluth said in Formula 1:

    First race was a bit of a continuation of last year

    Media talking about some dull scandal

    Not so much a race as a procession

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • sparkyS Offline
    sparkyS Offline
    sparky
    wrote on last edited by sparky
    #316

    Much more focus in the UK media on Christian Horner's private life than anything going on down on the track.

    That said, what happened on the track was a procession.

    F1 has really lost its way. Yawn!

    M antipodeanA 2 Replies Last reply
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  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    wrote on last edited by
    #317

    Watched it with my son, who is an F1 superfan.

    We ended up speeding up the middle section. Race was over after the first corner.

    I can believe that with all the money in F1 that one other team can’t match Redbull’s car.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    Machpants
    replied to sparky on last edited by
    #318

    @sparky said in Formula 1:

    Much more focus in the UK media on Christian Horner's private life than anything going on down on the track.

    That said, what happened on the track was a procession.

    F1 has really lost its way. Yawn!

    Interest of the track in UK media is coe a) we still don't know the result of that, unlike who will be champion this year and B ) it's not UK hero Hamilton on top so they snipe at red bull

    MajorRageM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    wrote on last edited by
    #319

    Yeah shithouse that seemingly without even trying the leader can build a 30 fucking second gap before he even needs to pit. How?

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to Machpants on last edited by
    #320

    @Machpants said in Formula 1:

    @sparky said in Formula 1:

    Much more focus in the UK media on Christian Horner's private life than anything going on down on the track.

    That said, what happened on the track was a procession.

    F1 has really lost its way. Yawn!

    Interest of the track in UK media is coe a) we still don't know the result of that, unlike who will be champion this year and B ) it's not UK hero Hamilton on top so they snipe at red bull

    This is the worst take ever. Hamilton is barely loved (which I don’t really get as prob the best British sportsman of the last decade) and Red Bull is a British team full of British excellence (an increasingly declining commodity).

    The media here LOVE a scandal, especially of somebody at the pointy end of success.

    Boring race at the front but the middle places had some interest. It’s up to the others to catch up, not RB to slow down.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to sparky on last edited by
    #321

    @sparky said in Formula 1:

    That said, what happened on the track was a procession.

    F1 has really lost its way. Yawn!

    Disagree. This has been F1 forever - a team gets an advantage and dominates. The secret is to have rule changes at an increased pace. This needs to balanced with the cost of making such changes in what is the pinnacle of motorsport engineering.

    That or ban Adrian Newey. Plenty of entertainment if you ignore the Red Bull procession.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #322

    @Bones said in Formula 1:

    Yeah shithouse that seemingly without even trying the leader can build a 30 fucking second gap before he even needs to pit. How?

    Take the best aero engineer motorsport has seen and add a prodigy who has been trained since he was in nappies to do nothing other than drive a vehicle faster than everyone else.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    wrote on last edited by
    #323

    How does Sargeant not get the ol' heave ho? Man he's cake.

    canefanC antipodeanA 2 Replies Last reply
    2
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #324

    @Bones said in Formula 1:

    How does Sargeant not get the ol' heave ho? Man he's cake.

    Must be commercial reasons because he's a rubbish driver. Same as Perez. Is he the only American driver in F1?

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to canefan on last edited by
    #325

    @canefan only one from the states. Perez is at least decent, not like he's constantly coming last and fucking up.

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
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