eurobrun wrote:Maldonado had absolutely no consistency this year, he seemed to switch from epic to slow and derpy at the toss of a coin
1000th post in this thread
He just switched from epic to derpy, he was almost always at least fast.
eurobrun wrote:Maldonado had absolutely no consistency this year, he seemed to switch from epic to slow and derpy at the toss of a coin
1000th post in this thread
eurobrun wrote:I honestly think that if Senna actually learned how to qualify well this year he could have unrejectified himself
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1
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.
DanielPT wrote:Just as added info for the discussion, Senna got points with good drives in Malaysia and China. In Europe he inherited tenth because Maldonado got a 20 second penalty after the race for unsafely rejoining the track. In Britain he managed 9th by avoiding troubles while others weren't so lucky. Hungary was another good drive. 10th at Italy was due to attrition. In India it was merited. Abu Dhabi was attrition again. In USA he was in good position to be able to capitalize on Mark Webber's DNF. He finished the season 6-6 on races with Maldonado on races despite 15-5, qualifying wise and in which 3 of those 5 was due to Maldonado being hit with some kind of penalty.
Biscione wrote:"Some Turkemenistani gulag repurposed for residential use" is the best way yet I've heard to describe North / East Glasgow.
DanielPT wrote:In Europe he inherited tenth because Maldonado got a 20 second penalty after the race for unsafely rejoining the track.
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1
AUTOSPORT asked each of F1's current team principals to pick their top ten drivers for the season, with points being awarded under the current scoring system of 25-18-15-12-10-8-6-4-2-1
The individual votes are kept secret so team bosses can give a more honest appraisal of their views.
Alonso was a clear winner this year, securing the biggest winning margin in the five years since AUTOSPORT began the top 10.
AUTOSPORT team principals' top 10:
1. Fernando Alonso: 269
2. Sebastian Vettel: 198
3. Lewis Hamilton: 177
4. Kimi Raikkonen : 176
5. Jenson Button: 104
6. Mark Webber: 66
7. Nico Hulkenberg: 50
8. Nico Rosberg: 30
9. Sergio Perez: 30
10. Felipe Massa: 27
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
East Londoner wrote:I've been pondering, Takuma Sato drove like a tool in 2005, causing several needless accidents, rather like Grosjean this season. Did Sato ever get called out about his driving by the media and other drivers like poor Romain did?
redbulljack14 wrote:East Londoner wrote:I've been pondering, Takuma Sato drove like a tool in 2005, causing several needless accidents, rather like Grosjean this season. Did Sato ever get called out about his driving by the media and other drivers like poor Romain did?
No, but he got Reject of the Year. Something I doubt Grosjean will get.
Row Man Gross-Gene wrote:redbulljack14 wrote:East Londoner wrote:I've been pondering, Takuma Sato drove like a tool in 2005, causing several needless accidents, rather like Grosjean this season. Did Sato ever get called out about his driving by the media and other drivers like poor Romain did?
No, but he got Reject of the Year. Something I doubt Grosjean will get.
Was Sato really as quick as Romain? Because Grosjean looks like a future race-winner and maybe championship contender to me.
Row Man Gross-Gene wrote:Just read that Grosjean won the race of champions! As I'm from the US, I don't really have a concept of what the importance of the ROC is. Anybody care to expound on the subject?
East Londoner wrote:I've been pondering, Takuma Sato drove like a tool in 2005, causing several needless accidents, rather like Grosjean this season. Did Sato ever get called out about his driving by the media and other drivers like poor Romain did?
redbulljack14 wrote:East Londoner wrote:I've been pondering, Takuma Sato drove like a tool in 2005, causing several needless accidents, rather like Grosjean this season. Did Sato ever get called out about his driving by the media and other drivers like poor Romain did?
No, but he got Reject of the Year. Something I doubt Grosjean will get.
Jocke1 wrote:Do you say Febuary or February?
redbulljack14 wrote:Jocke1 wrote:Do you say Febuary or February?
Pronounced Febuary, spelt February.
DanielPT wrote:I was thinking that it would be ironic if McLaren managed to iron out their issues and actually go all the way with one of their drivers next season and precisely after Hamilton decided to leave. In the case of being Button that lucky driver, this would also send our esteemed forumite Klon into a rampage!
DanielPT wrote:I was thinking that it would be ironic if McLaren managed to iron out their issues and actually go all the way with one of their drivers next season and precisely after Hamilton decided to leave. In the case of being Button that lucky driver, this would also send our esteemed forumite Klon into a rampage!
mario wrote:DanielPT wrote:I was thinking that it would be ironic if McLaren managed to iron out their issues and actually go all the way with one of their drivers next season and precisely after Hamilton decided to leave. In the case of being Button that lucky driver, this would also send our esteemed forumite Klon into a rampage!
It would be rather ironic if that happened, and it is also true that Klon would not be best pleased about such a turn of events either - that said, I am not entirely sure that we will see such a turn of events happen given McLaren cannot seem to maintain a consistent run of form across a season in recent years.
In theory, I imagine that the team will have the luxury of being able to evolve their current car into next seasons car for the first time in several years (given the large changes we saw between their 2010, 2011 and 2012 challengers), something that Red Bull have had the relative luxury of doing. They should also, by rights, have the ability and resources to sort out their reliability ahead of 2013 - reliability cost them dearly in 2012 - and we have seen a few hints of other potential avenues of development for 2013 (passively switched aero devices, such as Red Bull used towards the tail end of 2012) that McLaren should also have the resources to exploit.
Yet, despite all of that, there is still something that makes me think that McLaren will be competitive and yet somehow contrive to throw things away again...
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...
Jocke1 wrote:Who has been the oldest driver in a 'young driver test', and how old?
pasta_maldonado wrote:The stewards have recommended that Alan Jones learns to drive.
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.
eurobrun wrote:I would be very surprised if there isn't a fair bit of AON branding on next years Marussia
mario wrote:eurobrun wrote:I would be very surprised if there isn't a fair bit of AON branding on next years Marussia
Chilton has claimed that he is bringing in third party sponsorship rather than AON backing (although I would imagine that the connections his father has within the business would help with that), so it is possible that the AON name might not appear on the cars next year.
AndreaModa wrote:mario wrote:eurobrun wrote:I would be very surprised if there isn't a fair bit of AON branding on next years Marussia
Chilton has claimed that he is bringing in third party sponsorship rather than AON backing (although I would imagine that the connections his father has within the business would help with that), so it is possible that the AON name might not appear on the cars next year.
I think it almost certainly will. I'm pretty sure they ran with AON branding during the young drivers test when he was in the car. I honestly can't see where any third party sponsorship would come from for a British driver, so whilst he might have a bit, I'll bet the majority will be AON money.
darkapprentice77 wrote:Why was the Toro Rosso STR4 so crap when it was just a copy of the successful Red Bull RB5 with an engine change?
Phoenix wrote:darkapprentice77 wrote:Why was the Toro Rosso STR4 so crap when it was just a copy of the successful Red Bull RB5 with an engine change?
Probably because the car was designed around the Renault engine rather than the Ferrari, and the fact STR's resources were far lesser than those of RBR - remember they got all the upgrades the RB5 chassis received some races later than the parent team. Also, having a rookie driver and another one who couldn't get a feel for F1 cars for dear life and was later replaced by another rookie didn't help matters.
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
Klon wrote:more liek Nick Ass-idy amirite?
JeremyMcClean wrote:3 car teams are always a bad idea, since the only teams who would have a chance of running a third car are the rich teams.(Ferrari, Red Bull, McLaren, Mercedes, maybe Lotus) You would not see someone like Marussia employ someone in a third car. Also, with more Ferraris, Red Bulls, etc, there is now even less of a chance for the other teams to score points, assuming that any third cars that finish in points positions would cancel each other out. (i.e. Like in the 1984 Italian GP)
darkapprentice77 wrote:Or they could reintroduce non-championship F1 races...