2. Sebastian Vettel. Time to retire, mate.
Honourable mentions to the TV director who was utterly hopeless, and Matteo Salvini just because I can.
![Razz :P](./images/smilies/icon_razz.gif)
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
He's got to buck it up big time next year now with the young mega talent Leclerc next to him. If he suffers another Ricciardo 2014 again then I think it's going to signal the beginning of the end of his time at the top
sw3ishida wrote:Jolyon Palmer brought us closer as a couple, for which I am grateful.
Ataxia wrote:Londoner wrote:Something I've thought about - what happens to our canon should we have a worldwide recession or some other outside event?
We'll be fine. It's Canon, non Kodak.
Mario on Gutierrez after the Italian Grand Prix wrote:He's no longer just a bit of a tool, he's the entire tool set.
tc3j3r wrote:Sebastian Vettel a tad obvious perhaps, but sometimes the obvious choice is the right choice.
Dishonourable mention to the TV director. Cutting away from Vettel just as the Stroll collision was obviously about to happen, to show a pointless shot of the crowd. Directors have an irritating habit of cutting away from a battle incident prematurely, while it's obviously not finished yet, to show unnecessary reaction shots, and as a result miss the next stage of the battle/incident (cf. Bottas v Hamilton at Silverstone). Plus the cutting away from the first attempt to show a Verstappen onbaord replay of the start, for no apparent reason.
Klon wrote:What did poor André do to you for him to be insulted like that?
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
dj_vicious wrote:Wow I haven't posted here in years! Hi everyone, I've been lurking for too long.
1. Sebastian Vettel. I fear that 2020 is going to go like Hill's 1999. I don't think Seb is any worse a driver today, but the man is not mentally focused. Too many mistakes under pressure is putting a lot of black marks on his Ferrari tenure. It's time for a sabbatical, or retirement from F1.
2. DRS. We criticize drivers for defending aggressively, but what choice to they have? Even with the superior Ferrari power, Leclerc had no answer to Hamilton reeling him in. The DRS rules are precisely designed to the prejudice of the leading driver. If the DRS gimmick must stay, the FIA should investigate a limited number of deployments per driver, per race.
Klon wrote:What did poor André do to you for him to be insulted like that?
CaptainGetz12 wrote:dj_vicious wrote:Wow I haven't posted here in years! Hi everyone, I've been lurking for too long.
1. Sebastian Vettel. I fear that 2020 is going to go like Hill's 1999. I don't think Seb is any worse a driver today, but the man is not mentally focused. Too many mistakes under pressure is putting a lot of black marks on his Ferrari tenure. It's time for a sabbatical, or retirement from F1.
2. DRS. We criticize drivers for defending aggressively, but what choice to they have? Even with the superior Ferrari power, Leclerc had no answer to Hamilton reeling him in. The DRS rules are precisely designed to the prejudice of the leading driver. If the DRS gimmick must stay, the FIA should investigate a limited number of deployments per driver, per race.
So basically do Indycar's "Push-to-Pass" feature? This explains why the 2021 regulations plan to ditch DRS.
dj_vicious wrote:CaptainGetz12 wrote:dj_vicious wrote:Wow I haven't posted here in years! Hi everyone, I've been lurking for too long.
1. Sebastian Vettel. I fear that 2020 is going to go like Hill's 1999. I don't think Seb is any worse a driver today, but the man is not mentally focused. Too many mistakes under pressure is putting a lot of black marks on his Ferrari tenure. It's time for a sabbatical, or retirement from F1.
2. DRS. We criticize drivers for defending aggressively, but what choice to they have? Even with the superior Ferrari power, Leclerc had no answer to Hamilton reeling him in. The DRS rules are precisely designed to the prejudice of the leading driver. If the DRS gimmick must stay, the FIA should investigate a limited number of deployments per driver, per race.
So basically do Indycar's "Push-to-Pass" feature? This explains why the 2021 regulations plan to ditch DRS.
I actually think the P2P is a better interpretation because there's a pretty good strategy involved. Often lead drivers who have saved up their P2P can defend a late-race challenge. I just don't know how well it could work with current F1 engine regs. I am definitely a fan of ditching DRS altogether.
Klon wrote:What did poor André do to you for him to be insulted like that?
Rob Dylan wrote:Mercedes paying homage to the other W12 chassis by breaking down 30 minutes in
1993DonningtonNo1Mk2 wrote:3. Driving Standards - The Q3 debacle, Vettel and Stroll, Leclerc's defending. What is going on here? Everyone seems to be turning into a bunch of Deletraz', Rossets, Inoues and Peases!
2. The stewards - I suspect they were biased because it was Ferrari's home GP.
1. Sebastian Vettel - Good grief! It's getting increasingly hard to believe this guy's a 4 time Champ! 2nd year in a row he's cocked up on Ferrari's home turf and rejoining in front of Stroll like that? That was idiotic to say the least though Stroll only did marginally better by not hitting Gasly. Leclerc now ahead by 2 Wins to none and in the WDC, he ain't Vettel's understudy anymore, he's doing a Ricciardo!
100th Post!
mario wrote:1993DonningtonNo1Mk2 wrote:3. Driving Standards - The Q3 debacle, Vettel and Stroll, Leclerc's defending. What is going on here? Everyone seems to be turning into a bunch of Deletraz', Rossets, Inoues and Peases!
2. The stewards - I suspect they were biased because it was Ferrari's home GP.
1. Sebastian Vettel - Good grief! It's getting increasingly hard to believe this guy's a 4 time Champ! 2nd year in a row he's cocked up on Ferrari's home turf and rejoining in front of Stroll like that? That was idiotic to say the least though Stroll only did marginally better by not hitting Gasly. Leclerc now ahead by 2 Wins to none and in the WDC, he ain't Vettel's understudy anymore, he's doing a Ricciardo!
100th Post!
With regards to the stewards, in Leclerc's post-race interviews, he stated that he thought some of his own moves were "right on the limit" of what was allowable. However, he then mentioned that, after the Austrian GP, having seen what Verstappen was being allowed to do in terms of on track aggression, he decided that if Verstappen was being allowed to get away with more questionable moves on track, then so could he.
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Rob Dylan wrote:Ok you guys were pretty passionate this weekend, which is what I like to see! So I've given a special option for those of you who weren't concentrating on a specific thing that was rejectful for this weekend. You have 48 hours to get your votes in
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.