fbjim wrote:So this is now the second team that Hamilton's been with that has descended into acrimony and chaos. Both with a teammate who has never been known with having poor relationships with teammates before. Perhaps Hamilton is simply a poor teammate?
I think there was some tension between Webber and Rosberg at times when they were at Williams, which seems to have come about because Webber was the first to mock Rosberg with the nickname of "Britney" (it seems that he sometimes gets quite annoyed at being called that, and it seems that Webber had a habit of using that nickname if he wanted to get under Rosberg's skin).
Otherwise, generally on the whole he seems to have been on good terms with his teammate, or at least not on bad terms (he seemed to be more indifferent towards Nakajima than anything else). Then again, I suppose that part of that could be down to the fact that, typically, he would have had the measure of his team mates (asides from his first season, where Webber's greater experience showed at times).
After all, Kazuki Nakajima rarely posed much of a threat to Rosberg and Wurz was already looking towards retiring - being in a position where you're not directly competing with your teammate certainly makes it easier to be on more amicable terms. As for Schumacher, Darren Heath has occasionally hinted that the relationship there wasn't perhaps quite so rosy (once reportedly claiming that he asked Rosberg to crush Schumacher, to which he claims Rosberg, grinning away, happily promised "Don't worry, I will") - then again, given that Darren Heath has a rather public hatred of Schumacher, I do not discount the possibility that the reports would be exaggerated and biased.
As for Hamilton, well, the relationship between himself and Alonso rapidly soured, though Alonso has indicated that his anger was directed more towards Ron Dennis and the senior management of McLaren rather than Hamilton.
Hamilton was, after all, their protege, and it seems to be the way that Alonso felt they would therefore seek to back "their man", or rather "their investment", in Hamilton that seems to have been as much a cause for recriminations as the personal relationship between Hamilton and Alonso.
By contrast, Alonso was the outsider coming into the team and requesting changes, some of which Ron Dennis was loath to implement. Given how tightly Hamilton was bound in to the team at the time, it's perhaps not surprising things were tense between them when Hamilton was almost the living embodiment of a management Alonso was butting heads with.
He seemed to get on reasonably well with Kovalainen and with Button though, despite fighting the latter for the title in the 2010 season - even his relationship with Rosberg in 2013 was reasonably amicable, although at the same time it was clear that there was no real way that they'd pose a major threat to Vettel that season. If another team, such as Red Bull, McLaren or Ferrari were more competitive and putting Mercedes under greater pressure, you'd probably see nothing like as much tension between the two drivers as we see now because both Hamilton and Rosberg would be able to externalise any rivalry.
To a certain extent, I wonder whether it is perhaps as much down to Hamilton perhaps being a poor judge of who to listen to? Lauda, it seems, does have a bias towards Hamilton - there are some reports that Hamilton seems to have developed a strong relationship with Lauda, perhaps in part due to being slightly overawed by his past achievements - and I wonder if perhaps Lauda, who isn't exactly known for compromise, is encouraging and exacerbating some of Hamilton's worse instincts?
Back to the race itself, and Rosberg has now commented on events:
Asked for his opinion about the crash, having watched video replays, Rosberg said: "I have seen it and I don't want to say - but definitely, as the stewards judged it a racing incident, that is the way one can describe it."
Although Hamilton claims that Rosberg told him in a post-race debrief that he deliberately did not avoid the incident because he wanted to "prove a point", the German was more circumspect about his actions when speaking to the media.
He was adamant that the move was not risky at all, and dismissed any suggestion he should have waited another lap until DRS was activated.
"I was quicker at the time and there was an opportunity, so I gave it a go around the outside as the inside was blocked," Rosberg said.
"I didn't see any risk in overtaking, or trying to overtake, so why should I not try? The opportunity was there even without DRS because I was so much quicker, so I gave it a go.
"Inside was not possible, so I tried around the outside. Should I have waited? That is very hypothetical. Who knows what happens afterwards?
"The opportunity was there and, for me, it wasn't a risky situation."
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/115560