gibells wrote:I remember the last time this argument came up...It was for Kimi Raikkonen.
You beat me to this point, because Kimi faced a lot of criticism concerning his arrival in Formula One.
But the FIA did grant Algueruari a Superlicence, and like it or not, they are the governing body and we have to accept their decision.
Massa cracks me up. In his first season with Sauber (2002) Massa screwed up so many times Sauber dropped him for the next year in favor of Frentzen. In 2004 Sauber brought him back after he had spent a year doing development work. Just look at his history, it goes like this:
Sauber 2002, 2004-2005
Ferrari 2006 to present.
Massa is speaking from experience. His experience was that for the first two years he was a walking disaster, and it took him five years in Formula One before he had matured enough. He was an exception, and his opinion on this matter should be disregarded, because most drivers who enter Formula One learn the ropes quickly, and mature and learn at a quicker rate than Massa.
Give the kid a chance, because he earned the opportunity. Besides, being a Formula One driver is nothing special or much different than many other forms of motorsport. You don't require the special blessing of the Pope to obtain a Superlicence. It's just a freaking race, and every week thousands of people do it, and most do it well.
It's bad enough we have had to endure the crappy politics in Formula One. It's no secret Formula One is saturated by excessive politics. Now some drivers are doing it, too. Just because Massa is closing towards the twilight of his career and senses a threat of replacement by a younger driver, doesn't give him licence to cloud Formula One with more BS politics and slam some young kid trying to break into the big show.
Racing should be decided on the track, not the court room.