Ray;
Schumacher for most of his career when interviewed had all the charm of stunned mullet.
Hakkinen was about as personable as a Finnish winter.
Alonso suffers foot-in-mouth disease and sledges his team openly when the car's a bee's dick off perfect (you can bet they love him for that). Otherwise he's threatening his team manager with whistleblowing to the FIA during a current WDC campaign (oh feel the love).
Raikkonen has all the grace to let the world he was taking a --- during Schumacher's final grid photo, and that was all any interviewer got out of him in 2006 - five words - which made it a big year in PR for Kimi.
All very fast drivers. Speed and attitude are not correlated. They're not all as personable as Rossi. I might add they're all probably very nice people in their lives off camera when they're not busy boring you in your armchair on SpeedTV. I'd agree it was more fun knowing Bergher had just tried practical joke #1,298 on some other driver, that Senna was intense, that Mansell would openly eat anyone with a dissenting opinion and that Coulthard strutted around pit girls like James Bond on cocaine, but you'd have a very short career as a team manager if you rate your drivers on public persona.
His excuse for ending up in the gravel is the same as that Vettel had for blowing away Webber's first win, or Hamilton's for repeatedly falling afoul of FIA regs on driver sportsmanship. Inexperience, and plenty of it. For what it's worth it's much easier to throw away your car on rapidly degrading tyres with a high fuel load. This tends to happen when your slower car doesn't sneak into Q1. Which tends to happen when you're not getting the latest upgrades.
Whining about not getting what you want and whining about not getting what you need are two very different things. You're treating them as if they're the same. ISLAMATRON, you also miss this point.
There is no luck in knowing the best you can do, if you drive as well as a two-time WDC, is to be tenths off the pace. Your career will not move forward in the slightest. In racing, if you're not moving forward, you're going backwards. Fast. Unless his father and sponsors bankroll a team or a drive, his F1 career is history and we'll never know if it's because he didn't realise his potential in F1 or because he wasn't given the support to be able to do so. At any rate his career is moved back several years. It'll be another few before he has the same opportunities Hamilton has. A guy he used to dice with regularly in GP2.
It's a job. it's a career just like any other aside from your having a 15 year shelf life before you retire at 35. Noone's sitting around feeling blessed about turning up on the grid. They're all wanting to move forwards and any driver in Nelson's situation would be livid. If anything his reaction is tame. His skills are his asset and if they aren't given a chance to shine - as he's done in every other formula he's competed in - then he's wasting his time. Only rich millionaire playboys sit in F1 cars wondering how "damn lucky" they are to be there.
So "damn lucky" my ass. You'd be far more fortunate having a Minardi back on the grid, where two drivers are given equal spec in relatively uncompetitive cars. You won't win races but you can shine, and your whole season is testing.
After all, some Spanish bloke started his career off as such, then went off to do a year's worth of testing when there were zero bans on just how much you can do. He started out a bit rough but all up the experience seems to have done him a world of good. He's still about as exciting to interview, though.
Mitsuhirato +1.