Cynon wrote:Wizzie wrote:JohnMLTX wrote:Bourdais would've kicked ass and taken names if he had been in formula 1 this year.
But he wasn't. So he didn't.
Toro Rosso really is a reputation destoryer isn't it?
Toro Rosso killing people's reputations is not really an unpopular opinion... they have the Red Bull chassis (de facto, anyway) and a Ferrari engine, and still manage to suck. But are we sure it's the car that sucks ... ? ... or maybe the wheelholders?
They don't have a Red Bull chassis any more, or at least not in the sense of a customer car. For the moment, they do get their chassis designs from Red Bull Technology, but the design teams for Red Bull and Toro Rosso have to be independent, and have individual IP rights to the cars.
In the case of the 2010 car, Toro Rosso used the 2009 STR4 (which was in turn based on the RB5, albeit usually about 4-5 races or more behind the works outfit) as the basis for the STR5, hence the visual similarity between the Toro Rosso and Red Bull cars, but the significant difference in performance.
I do think, though, that the other big problem with Toro Rosso is that the team is slowly dying from neglect.
After all, Red Bull have been trying to sell the team off once customer cars were no longer permitted, and the budget for Toro Rosso seems to have remained static for a few years now. After all, we have seen the parent team become progressively richer (to the point where it is rumoured to have the biggest budget in the paddock, with over €300 million allocated for 2011), and the fact that it has coincided with a period of prolonged success.
It may not be entirely coincidental that the freezing of Toro Rosso's budget has coincided with a slide in that teams fortunes, even if they are given help from Red Bull Technology.
DanielPT wrote:And that leads to another unpopular opinion:
Toro Rosso
can nurture talent. Proof? They delivered Sebastian Vettel!
If they want a better way of evaluating youngsters just put someone reliable in the other car. I happen know such driver and luckily he is available. He is called Nick.
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)
It helped, though, that senior figures in Red Bull Racing, like Mateschitz, happened to have a soft spot for Vettel, and were determined to sign him for the parent team. If the senior management were different, and didn't have such an emotional attachment to Vettel, I wonder how he would have performed without the same level of attention and support.