Dj_bereta wrote:I liked the fierce battle in the middlefield. I think Force India maybe had score a point or two without the penalties.
Also, I see a lot of people saying Alonso is regretting his move to McLaren-Honda. I disagree. Alonso leaves Ferrari, in my point of view, because he was bored of fighting only for a podium, or a win or two in a season. Maybe he regret this move if Ferrari catch Mercedes, otherwise, not.
FINALLY SOMEONE WITH BRAINS.
I laugh at all those McLaren ROTR nominations for Malaysia. I mean, McLaren did much better than they expected themselves and I'm sure there's a full bucket of performance to be unlocked from both the car and the engine. The sole fact that they were fighting the Red Bulls already at the 2nd race of the season is quite encouraging given what we saw in Australia and their pre-season form. Alonso was the first to know they wouldn't be fighting for anything this season. I heard this comment yesterday and I think is quite spot on:
Ferrari try to improve by copying, not innovating . This is something I totally agree with and one of the main reasons Alonso left Ferrari; He wanted to go somewhere they try to think out of the box, which is how first Red Bull and later Mercedes got to the top spot, and McLaren seems to be that place. They're taking a different approach and Alonso left because he was convinced it would be a winning project... in two or three years time. Alonso himself doesn't seem to have a problem with this, so why would anyone say it's a bad career move? Only time will tell, but not in two, four or six races time. Let's bring this back at the end of 2017. Ferrari also seemed a great career move back in 2009.
Also, Vettel and Ferrari did a great job this weekend, but I don't believe they're going to challenge Mercedes at all. Maybe, at some races they can do it, but over the course of the season Mercedes has the better package.
Tread lightly in ARWS. Every decision might be your last.