CoopsII wrote:It looks like Williams may at least begin the season with a competative car. It may not be that way all year, I understand that. However, assuming it does my possibly unpopular opinion is this...
Williams have a car with the potential to win races and thus the championship but sadly their driver line-up is not of the calibre to make the most of it.
Id love to be proved wrong but I dont think Bottas has it and Massa had it (a bit) but not anymore.
Given that it has been a long time since a Williams driver was able to challenge for the title, it is not surprising that Williams doesn't have the first pick of drivers that they might have had in the past.
That said, whilst I agree that overall their line up is probably not the strongest out there, it is not a terrible line up either - Bottas does seem to be maturing quite quickly and is showing promise, whilst Massa, although perhaps no longer quite as strong as once he was, does seem to be beginning to recapture a little of the form he had now that Williams are giving him room to develop.
Now, 2012 saw Williams produce a halfway decent car but, asides from Maldonado's performance in Spain, saw that thrown away by a driver who was quick but very erratic and another who was less erratic but struggling for performance (although Williams didn't help Bruno's cause by depriving him of so much practise time). Massa is a relatively mature driver and unlikely to throw the car into the barriers, whilst Bottas is showing a lot of maturity for a driver with so little experience - it could well be that, in the opening races, that slightly more conservative driving may yield dividends through the mistakes and breakdowns of others. Maybe it won't be a torrent of points, but a steady trickle of strong results that sees Williams rise to a respectable finishing position in the WCC - after all, realistically it is going to be very difficult for Williams to keep up with the manufacturers given the disparity in resources.