WIDD wrote:Wizzie wrote:WIDD wrote:Would be something quite fitting if Schumi ended his career as a pay driver...just like he started!
And at Sauber to boot. The same guys that gave him his big break in racing with their Endurance Racing dream team of himself, Wendlinger and Frentzen. Ironically enough at the time, he was considered to be have the least potential of the trio even if all three were considered hugely talented.
Wasn't he meant to be committed to Sauber for their F1 debut as well but Peter Sauber let him out of the contract so he could join Benetton?
I'm hopeful Schumi stays, I think there's still more to come. Plus, getting booted out of Merc for the Spoilt Brat might give him extra incentive to prove them wrong.
The indication is that Mercedes tried to direct Schumacher towards Sauber given that it was their customer team at the time, but in the end they chose not to force the issue.
Mister Fungus wrote:I don't think Lewis did it just for the money, maybe he is counting on Mercedes being the best in 2014 when the new regs are up. After all they are an engine manufacturer and engines will supposedly play a bigger deal after 2014.
Given that Autosport reported a little while ago that McLaren were upping their offer to match Mercedes's offer, that alone shouldn't have been the primary driver.
Whilst the exact reasons for Hamilton's decision may not be entirely clear, the fact that the importance of the manufacturers is being emphasised in the post 2014 regulations might have weighed on his mind. McLaren are no longer going to be a works team for Mercedes from next year onwards and will have to start paying for their engines, something that may have a more noticeable impact in 2014 when the engine contracts are likely to sharply increase in cost. Marin Brundle also indicated a while ago that might also have an impact on support for developing energy recovery systems (the one area Mercedes seems to be strongest in) - and doubling the capacity of the energy recovery systems is likely to boost their importance as a performance differentiator.
McLaren's budget would probably have come under pressure from another side too - there have been suggestions that Vodafone won't renew their contract with the team when it runs out soon, which would have been a fairly sizeable financial hit for the team. Perez's talent is an obvious attraction, but perhaps the potential for a deal with Telmex to offset the loss of Vodafone also featured in McLaren's mind?
Similarly, it may simply be that Hamilton's relations with McLaren have come to something of an end anyway - there have been a fair number of personnel changes since Hamilton joined McLaren, most notably the departure of Ron Dennis (there have also been a few other high profile defections, like Pat Fry), and his relations with Whitmarsh's current management team don't seem to have been as strong as they were with Ron Dennis's team.
As Ubik says, the two sides seem to have been drifting apart for some time - there were reports that some within McLaren were getting very frustrated with Hamilton in 2011 (the repeated clashes on track with Massa, his erratic comments to the press and so forth), whilst some of the operational errors McLaren have made this season must have tried Hamilton's patience (the underfuelled car in Spain, multiple botched pit stops in the opening races and mismanaging their strategies in wet weather). Even the best of relationships would become a little strained under those circumstances.
There is one other aspect that DanielPT picks up on, and that is sponsorship. The deal with Mercedes might give him greater licence to promote himself, but there have been occasional reports that both Hamilton and Button were sometimes complaining that their sponsorship commitments for McLaren were disrupting their personal lives and training regimes. That might have also fed into some of Hamilton's dissatisfaction with the team, so it is possible that he might have seen a move to Mercedes as an opportunity to step back a little from that front too.