AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Sep 2023, 00:39
KimiRai wrote: ↑05 Sep 2023, 00:04
Regarding the drivers situation, an often repeated saying lately is that Aston need two top drivers in order to succeed. I'm not sure whats the benefit of having two of those in the team as history has shown it can become counterproductive with increased tension and drivers taking points off eachother. The model that has worked best is a great first driver for the driver's championship and a second driver that helps the team in constructors, almost all domination cycles were had with this (and that's Red Bull's effectively as well). The problem, admittedly, is that Lance's current form is so low that it doesn't fill that second driver role as he's not scoring enough points for the constructors. In my opinion the most effective second seat at Aston would be an improved Lance closer to Fernando but not enough to bother him too much. I'd hope for that to happen in 2024 with a better pre-season without injuries and setbacks, but if Lance by that point is still at the same poor level then I would agree with looking for another driver.
I find it strange that a lot of Alonso fans are striking at Stroll currently. If anything they should defend him because Fernando is comfortable this way and he works best as a leading force with the team fully behind him.
I agree generally with your point. No one expects Lance to trouble Fernando but Lance needs to at least make himself useful. What if he could have formed a DRS train with Alonso to defend from Hamilton? He was nowhere to be found.
As it is currently, two races outside the points and they would have saved a massive amount of money by not fielding a second car in Zandvoort or Monza.
In truth, Aston martin had a great car at the beginning of the year and I had hoped to see a bit more "disruption" but they only had 1 driver capable of it.
I would disagree that Lance couldve done anything at Monza to better fight Lewis, the performance difference was too much and Lance is not the caliber of driver to overcome that. In the first half, Lance had a lot of bad luck outside his own performance that makes the points total and therefore his overall performance seem bad. I'll do a breakdown ...
Bahrain - 6th Did really well
Jeddah - Reliability retirement while running in 5th, not his fault
Australia - 4th did really well
Baku - 7th to Alonso's 4th. Not the strongest track for AM so did well
Miami - Team tried to get him into Q2 one set on newly surfaced track that evolved super fast. knocked out in Q1.
Monaco - Floor damage in quali meant race effectively over and he was trying too much to overcome and made mistakes. But even if he didnt make mistakes he would not have been to score any points due to damage in quali.
Spain - 6th did very well considering now AM really starts to fall back
So if you accept that hes not a tier-1 or even a tier-2 driver his performances in the first half have been in line with what you would expect from him. Bad luck and team errors have made the point differential seem worse. His performance has definitely slipped since the AM performance slump but you'd expect a lesser driver to struggle with a more difficult car. Its fair to say hes not great at pushing a mediocre car to it limit and makes mistakes. Its also fair to say hes not very good at coming through the field from the back. I think he might be feeling a bit of pressure as well because there has been lot of criticism.
I really dont think it holds back AM in any way. If anything, it might get them more WT time.