We will have to wait and see if it is indeed verified by a more trustworthy source, but it would tie in with rumours that Boullier's attempts to broker a deal to secure the long term future of the team had failed to succeed. Given that Boullier has admitted that Lotus are under financial strain, if Maldonado does still have the support of PDVSA, taking Maldonado might prove to be the necessary price for PDVSA's backing and securing the short to medium term finances of the team. I imagine that there will be quite a few spectators decrying this move if it is indeed true, along with those who may criticise Williams if Massa gets Maldonado's old seat mainly because of Petrobras (though Williams's fragile financial situation may well force the deal).
The other question would be over where Hulkenberg could end up given that most of his first choices seem to have been closed off - Eddie Jordan did claim recently that Hulkenberg is heading back to Force India for 2014, and recently his predictions about the driver market seem to have been pretty accurate. It looks like, for now, Hulkenebrg is effectively stuck making lateral moves around the midfield whilst the same drivers tend to monopolise the top teams.
Rusujuur wrote:James1978 wrote:If Brawn does leave Mercedes then i can see Hamilton wanting out for 2015 (it's probably too late for him to do anything about '14). Chances are he'll return "home" to McLaren, with the lure of Honda power like his idol Senna had, or if Alonso leaves Ferrari then Hamilton takes his seat there.
I think he will wait and see what the next year brings. It was the plan all along really, the fact that he made the right move for this year also was an added bonus. I really think that Brawn has not had that much to do with the actual cars in recent years as some may think so losing him might not change anything for the Mercs and might not bring any actual speed to any other team. Maybe he will retire as he is hitting the 60 mark soon. BTW, the old guard that has dominated F1 since the early 90s are all well over 50 and as I understand next years Ferrari will be at least partially designed by Rory Byrne who is going to be 70 in January...
That is actually something else worth noting - we talk about the driver line ups of most team remaining fairly static but, compared to the career span of most senior designers, the driver line ups fluctuate a lot more frequently than the designers do. A lot of familiar names at most teams have been there for a couple of decades at least, and a lot of teams rely on the same designers a lot more heavily than they rely on the same drivers.
That is one thing that, to a certain extent, concerns me about the struggles of the smaller teams. We have seen that back of the field to midfield teams have offered great opportunities for young designers to make their mark - some designers, like Tombazis, are fortunate enough to come in at a top team from the start, but others, like Newey or Byrne, worked their way up from smaller outfits to the major teams by showing that they could punch above their weight when it came to designing a car.
Where are their modern equivalents? About the only person who seems to have caught the attention of the top teams in the same way is Matt Morris, the former chief designer at Sauber who has since been poached by McLaren - and even then it is perhaps too early to tell whether he will prove to be a diamond in the rough or not. If the teams have become conservative when picking drivers, they are perhaps even more so when picking designers.