ringo wrote: ↑03 Sep 2023, 17:39
It is not that linear. Lets say Perez would be the golden boy in the team. They would focus on him and it's likely he would be winning.
Perez inconsistency is mainly due to him trying to be a different type of driver. If he was the fastest guy in redbull and the car and team builr around his style. He would be winning all races. He wont be on pole all the time. But consistently in the first 2 rows and almost guaranteed to win.
Red Bull would need a really poor second driver for Perez to win every race.
Let's say Red Bull took the unretired Hulkenberg as the second driver alongside Perez. I suspect that
even now Hulkenberg is still much faster than Perez in qualifying. Would Perez come from behind to overtake Hulkenberg in every race?
It's the age old question: does Hulkenberg go backwards from a Top 10 qualifying position because of Hulkenberg or because of HAAS?
According to Frank Dernie, Toyota had this problem when they had Trulli (only good at qualifying) and Kobayashi (only good at racing).
It's
REALLY not ideal to have one driver who is only good at racing and one drive who is only good at qualifying.
Surely, if they did not have Verstappen, Red Bull would seek out a driver who is good at both qualifying
and racing, like say Fernando Alonso who was off-contract for the 2023 season?