Maybe they should have done this 2 years years ago when both Lando and Daniel where begging for a front end that did what they wanted!
I'm partial against this system ever since it made Newey run to Red Bull in the mid 2000s.
The flip side of what you say could be that at a 'small team' he did what he wanted as he was his own boss, but being a a multi like mclaren means there could be more than one 'guiding light' and he can not get exactly what he wants passed off? I have been 'places' where what actually happens seems quite close to what was planned, but others (what we called) put their ore in, and made a couple of 'small tweaks', maybe due using an approved supplier, and the final is not what was anticipated.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑23 Mar 2023, 22:58Personally I think they took the correct decision to sack James Key. He was good for Force India and Torro Rosso but these are small teams that can be top of the midfield at best. They don't have the history, the drivers or the resources to ever get to the top. He was good at those midfield teams but he wasn't good enough for Mclaren and it seems that all these articles were just overhyping him. He was here from 2019 and since then the car lost it's ability to be best at high speed corners and straights without fixing it's weakness in medium and slow speed corners. He had his chances and top F1 is punishing to those that don't deliver. I believe that his replacements will deliver much better just like Piastri did.
The role of the TD is to set the direction and make sure the team has the resources they need to do their jobs. Simply put, It’s a technical project manager role.
Adrian wanted to do more than that, so he found a place that allowed him.
Why, you want him to get started on next year's car?
Big Tea wrote: ↑23 Mar 2023, 23:41The flip side of what you say could be that at a 'small team' he did what he wanted as he was his own boss, but being a a multi like mclaren means there could be more than one 'guiding light' and he can not get exactly what he wants passed off? I have been 'places' where what actually happens seems quite close to what was planned, but others (what we called) put their ore in, and made a couple of 'small tweaks', maybe due using an approved supplier, and the final is not what was anticipated.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑23 Mar 2023, 22:58Personally I think they took the correct decision to sack James Key. He was good for Force India and Torro Rosso but these are small teams that can be top of the midfield at best. They don't have the history, the drivers or the resources to ever get to the top. He was good at those midfield teams but he wasn't good enough for Mclaren and it seems that all these articles were just overhyping him. He was here from 2019 and since then the car lost it's ability to be best at high speed corners and straights without fixing it's weakness in medium and slow speed corners. He had his chances and top F1 is punishing to those that don't deliver. I believe that his replacements will deliver much better just like Piastri did.
Yes it seems like Sanchez will have I suppose the output of the TD but without perhaps the same authority, what's notable is that you'd assume that authority now goes to Stella, and that's the real take home here, as it consolidates Stellas influence over the car/ability to draw the car together.Sevach wrote: ↑23 Mar 2023, 23:58Adrian wanted to do more than that, so he found a place that allowed him.
Back to current events, from what i can gather Sanchez was essentially TD at Ferrari under a different name, with Cardile being aero chief.
He wouldn't be able to coexist with Key at Mclaren, nor would he take a lesser job.
Sanchez "director of car concept and performance" will be the middle ground between the aero team and the mechanical engineering team, despite being presented as 3 equal chiefs it still sounds like he's "more equal" than the others since he gets to pick which concept goes forward while not really working at the aero department.
How tightly was PP managed to work inside a concept and how did that restrict him?mclaren111 wrote: ↑24 Mar 2023, 13:20There had to be good reasons for Stella to choose Peter Prod over Key...
Hope it doesn't backfire on him & PP delivers with new windtunnel...
Key didn't produce the results so being fired was the only recourse for McLaren to take. As for the Baku upgrade? Who knows at this point. At least with the restructure at McLaren, they'll be able to explore paths Key either didn't think of or didn't want to explore.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑23 Mar 2023, 21:06So reading this correctly, Key is fired with immediate effect (not a big statement of belief in Baku upgrade) and Sanchez is joining on January 1st of 2024. So effectively he will be working on 2025 car at the earliest?