James1978 wrote:Why have Senna when you can have Kobayashi FFS!!!!
Well, I could be that guy and ask why Kobayashi when you can have Barrichello ("FFS!!!!") ... and yes, I am going to be that guy.
James1978 wrote:Why have Senna when you can have Kobayashi FFS!!!!
James1978 wrote:If the Force sign Senna then they're resigned to 8th at best in the constructors. Maybe even 9th as Toro Rosso might beat them!
Klon wrote:more liek Nick Ass-idy amirite?
Fetzie on Ferrari wrote:How does a driver hurtling around a race track while they're sous-viding in their overalls have a better understanding of the race than a team of strategy engineers in an air-conditioned room?l
James1978 wrote:Why have Senna when you can have Kobayashi FFS!!!!
Nuppiz wrote:James1978 wrote:Why have Senna when you can have Kobayashi FFS!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETxmCCsMoD0
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:Nuppiz wrote:James1978 wrote:Why have Senna when you can have Kobayashi FFS!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETxmCCsMoD0
This sums it up better...
Mitch Hedberg wrote:I want to be a race car passenger: just a guy who bugs the driver. Say man, can I turn on the radio? You should slow down. Why do we gotta keep going in circles? Man, you really like Tide...
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:BlindCaveSalamander wrote:Nuppiz wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETxmCCsMoD0
This sums it up better...
Or this might suffice...
Klon wrote:Minardi Man wrote:BaconLettuceNinja wrote:Or this might suffice...
Pigs http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwU8QeW4ofU
Stop being stuck in the past: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FKoplr-c1k
Dr. Helmut Marko wrote: Finally we have an Australian in the team who can start a race well and challenge Vettel.
aerond wrote:Yes RDD, but we always knew you never had any sort of taste either![]()
tommykl wrote:I have a shite car and meme sponsors, but Corrado Fabi will carry me to the promised land with the power of Lionel Richie.
Faustus wrote:kostas22 wrote:Romain Grosjean had a seat fitting at Enstone today. He didn't say anything about having a confirmed contract for next year, but why would they bother giving him a seat fitting if he isn't going to be part of the team next season? Could mean he's being demoted to test-driver but I don't really see that happening.
In itself, it doesn't necessarily mean anything but you're right, he's probably staying.
By the way, Bruno Senna had a seat fitting at Force India last wednesday.
DanielPT wrote:I think Bruno had his chance. The real point to me is that he hasn't shown any signs of a latent speed in him. When he stayed clear of trouble he was solid but rather anonymous and was only capable of scoring minor points. Despite being 6-6 in the race he was out-qualified more often than not and lack the ultimate pace I believed he could have. I was wrong and he clearly seems just average. In my opinion there are better drivers out there who deserve more of a chance, like Alguersuari, Kobayashi and Valsecchi, for instance.
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1
Aerond wrote:I'm still trying to figure why ppl is so disrespectful for Bruno... What I'm trying to say is I think he deserves another chance! I mean, you can't really judge him on the results of his first outing with Hispania; a terrible car, learning the circuits and a team with no F1 knowledge all at once; then he steps in the Renault with no track time in the car (and still he doesn't a terrible job at it; not stellar but not really bad), and then in Williams he was the most regular out of the two drivers and would have finished ahead of Maldonado if it wasn't for Spain, despite missing 30% of practice time to make way for Bottas... I'll be more than happy if he signs for Force India, TBH
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:DanielPT wrote:I think Bruno had his chance. The real point to me is that he hasn't shown any signs of a latent speed in him. When he stayed clear of trouble he was solid but rather anonymous and was only capable of scoring minor points. Despite being 6-6 in the race he was out-qualified more often than not and lack the ultimate pace I believed he could have. I was wrong and he clearly seems just average. In my opinion there are better drivers out there who deserve more of a chance, like Alguersuari, Kobayashi and Valsecchi, for instance.
This. So much. It doesn't matter how consistent and reliable he was, he let somebody doing a fantastic impression of Andrea de Cesaris beat him - Maldonado could've easily scored about twice as many points as he actually did, but even then Senna was still behind him. And Senna wasn't that reliable anyway, he made 2 errors in qualifying - Spain where he went off and out in Q1, and Singapore where he hit the wall at turn 19 in Q1 and Q2, IIRC. He's done absolutely nothing to justify his position in the face of his complete lack of pace.
JeremyMcClean wrote:Not that Senna is bad, but that there is lots of better drivers out there. Like Valsecchi, Buemi, Alguersuari, and Kobayashi. But the team was already going downwards anyways when they let Hulkenburg go to Sauber, of all teams. (It might work, it might not.)
Speaking of Valsecchi, I find it both amusing and unsettling that he isn't considered for any of the seats
giraurd wrote:Valsecchi had 7 years of experience in GP2-speed cars (counts hell of a lot there) and only found success this season...thus no wonder he's not considered. And experience counts hell of a lot in GP2 due to the very limited practice time they get, but that experience doesn't have much relevance in F1 whatsoever...
Same goes for Razia really.
takagi_for_the_win wrote:Aerond wrote:I'm still trying to figure why ppl is so disrespectful for Bruno... What I'm trying to say is I think he deserves another chance! I mean, you can't really judge him on the results of his first outing with Hispania; a terrible car, learning the circuits and a team with no F1 knowledge all at once; then he steps in the Renault with no track time in the car (and still he doesn't a terrible job at it; not stellar but not really bad), and then in Williams he was the most regular out of the two drivers and would have finished ahead of Maldonado if it wasn't for Spain, despite missing 30% of practice time to make way for Bottas... I'll be more than happy if he signs for Force India, TBH
To be quite blunt, he's not quick enough. Hes kinda like a mini Nick Heidfeld if you like, a solid driver who will never top a time sheet, but will always pick up points (except Heidfeld could pick up podiums quite easily; Senna picks up 8th quite easily), while Maldonado is a very quick driver, who by the seasons end had reined in some of his crashy instincts (Singapore is a case in point). Just my two cents
Meatwad wrote:giraurd wrote:Valsecchi had 7 years of experience in GP2-speed cars (counts hell of a lot there) and only found success this season...thus no wonder he's not considered. And experience counts hell of a lot in GP2 due to the very limited practice time they get, but that experience doesn't have much relevance in F1 whatsoever...
Same goes for Razia really.
Valsecchi is still only 25 and Razia 23 so it's not like they are too old to make an F1 debut or have too few competitive years left. Valsecchi is over three years younger than Senna and more than five years younger than Damon Hill was in his debut season. Who knows, they could adapt to F1 more easily than to GP2 (Kobayashi is a good example of this).
But clearly the main reason that Valsecchi hasn't even been considered by any team is that he doesn't have as much money as some other drivers. And I don't believe Razia has as much as some have claimed, either. I'm sure even Chanoch Nissany would get a seat if he brought 34 million dollars.
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:I think you're missing the point. Valsecchi's been in GP2 for 5 years now. If he was anything special, he'd already be in F1 by now. Same with Razia. They were 8th and 12th in the championship in 2011. Of the drivers ahead of them; Grosjean and Pic went to F1; Luca Filippi tried to switch to IndyCars, failed, went back to GP2 and won his first race back; Jules Bianchi and Sam Bird switched to Formula Renault 3.5; Christian Vietoris went to DTM (also note he was 7th, ahead of Valsecchi despite missing two meetings); and nobody really wanted Dani Clos apart from HRT. The rest (Giedo van der Garde, Stefano Colletti, and Marcus Ericsson) were beaten by Valsecchi and Razia, and handily at that, but considering the only one I've heard of is van der Garde, and that that was only because he was the centre of a legal fight between Spyker and Super Aguri way back when, does not exactly speak well of them.
Neither of them would've come close to the title had Bianchi and Bird stayed, or if Robin Frijns or Antonio Felix da Costa were there. Those drivers are the ones that will make it to F1, and that is because they have competed for and won titles on their own merit. There is nothing talent-wise to suggest a team should hire Valsecchi or Razia over one of the drivers I just mentioned, or a driver with F1 experience, such as Sutil, Alguersuari, or Kobayashi.
DanielPT wrote:BlindCaveSalamander wrote:I think you're missing the point. Valsecchi's been in GP2 for 5 years now. If he was anything special, he'd already be in F1 by now. Same with Razia. They were 8th and 12th in the championship in 2011. Of the drivers ahead of them; Grosjean and Pic went to F1; Luca Filippi tried to switch to IndyCars, failed, went back to GP2 and won his first race back; Jules Bianchi and Sam Bird switched to Formula Renault 3.5; Christian Vietoris went to DTM (also note he was 7th, ahead of Valsecchi despite missing two meetings); and nobody really wanted Dani Clos apart from HRT. The rest (Giedo van der Garde, Stefano Colletti, and Marcus Ericsson) were beaten by Valsecchi and Razia, and handily at that, but considering the only one I've heard of is van der Garde, and that that was only because he was the centre of a legal fight between Spyker and Super Aguri way back when, does not exactly speak well of them.
Neither of them would've come close to the title had Bianchi and Bird stayed, or if Robin Frijns or Antonio Felix da Costa were there. Those drivers are the ones that will make it to F1, and that is because they have competed for and won titles on their own merit. There is nothing talent-wise to suggest a team should hire Valsecchi or Razia over one of the drivers I just mentioned, or a driver with F1 experience, such as Sutil, Alguersuari, or Kobayashi.
I would usually take your stand, but then it comes to my mind the fact that Pastor Maldonado honed his skills for 4 years in GP2 before joining Williams and ending the team's winless streak. It was 8 years in which guys like Webber, Rosberg, Barrichello and Wurz all failed to do (Not that Wurz is a winner, but I will go by the latest trend on the forum). I mean, that is special. You may say it was within special circumstances that surrounded the tyres and I say ok, it was. But he won in a dry race against one of the top drivers of this era and to emphasize that just look where is team-mate was. Exactly, his team-mate was nowhere! Also, as Valsecchi, Maldonado led the GP2 field back then when everyone who finished ahead of him the year before had left and, from those ahead of him in 2009, no one can say that they've won a race in F1. Valsecchi proved he could win the GP2 title. For that he deserves a chance. As for Razia, I think he needs another year with another team in GP2 just to prove this season was not a fluke.
Oh, and yes, I am eating humble pie in relation to things I've defended in the past in this forum...
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1
This wrote:Anyway, Frijns should be signed immediatly. Also sad how everybody so suickly forgot about poor Bertrand Baguette, who i think is massively underrated, and Belgian.
"The end of my season wasn't great," said di Resta. "We had mechanical issues, a chassis change, and ultimately the style of my driving did not suit for the last few races. Overall, I had ups and downs, although there were still some very big positives.
Svenko Wankerov wrote:DIREsta has a great career in comedy ahead of him:"The end of my season wasn't great," said di Resta. "We had mechanical issues, a chassis change, and ultimately the style of my driving did not suit for the last few races. Overall, I had ups and downs, although there were still some very big positives.
What's his driving style? Slow?
Biscione wrote:"Some Turkemenistani gulag repurposed for residential use" is the best way yet I've heard to describe North / East Glasgow.
Svenko Wankerov wrote:DIREsta has a great career in comedy ahead of him:"The end of my season wasn't great," said di Resta. "We had mechanical issues, a chassis change, and ultimately the style of my driving did not suit for the last few races. Overall, I had ups and downs, although there were still some very big positives.
What's his driving style? Slow?
Fetzie on Ferrari wrote:How does a driver hurtling around a race track while they're sous-viding in their overalls have a better understanding of the race than a team of strategy engineers in an air-conditioned room?l
DanielPT wrote:Not that they are looking good as he came into F1 as a Mercedes future driver and when a seat became vacant over there they preferred to go and snatch Hamilton from McLaren instead of taking the risk on Di Resta. That can't be good no matter the disproportionate size of the ego.
Backmarker wrote:Even Paul di Resta wouldn't choose Paul di Resta over Hamilton.
Benetton wrote:I have a feeling 2013 will be di Resta's last in Formula One unless he looks himself in the mirror and says to himself: "Jeez bloke your a bloody cock aren't you?"
CarlosFerreira wrote:Benetton wrote:I have a feeling 2013 will be di Resta's last in Formula One unless he looks himself in the mirror and says to himself: "Jeez bloke your a bloody cock aren't you?"
I wonder... for a while now I've had this feeling that true Champions (the Schumachers and Hakkinens and Ayrton Sennas of this world) are totally uncapable of self-deprecation. They are so sure they are the absolutely the best, ever, that any evidence otherwise is automatically dismissed as caused by some external cause.
Backmarker wrote:DanielPT wrote:Not that they are looking good as he came into F1 as a Mercedes future driver and when a seat became vacant over there they preferred to go and snatch Hamilton from McLaren instead of taking the risk on Di Resta. That can't be good no matter the disproportionate size of the ego.
Who in their right mind would choose Paul di Resta if they thought they had a chance to get Lewis Hamilton? Even Paul di Resta wouldn't choose Paul di Resta over Hamilton. If he had missed out against Pastor Maldonado or Vitaly Petrov then he would have good reason to be aggrieved. Though I do wonder if he's jealous that Hulkenberg has managed to get a seat at Sauber over him?
Phoenix wrote:PS: I'm glad you're back here along with your vintage Monteiro avatar