feni_remmen wrote: ↑23 Jun 2024, 06:45
A Quick Look at crossovers in both directions shows the hit and miss nature of this.
- Jacques Villeneuve was given the best seat in f1 and succeeded.
- Wayne Montana was given the best seat in indycar and succeeded, then went to Williams and “succeeded?”
- Steve Johnson went from mid f1 team to mid indycar and maintained expectations.
- Alessandro Zanardi went from the top Indy team to mid field Williams and failed.
- Romain Grosjean went from the slowest f1 team to 3rd best Indycar team. He brought his habits and reputation with him and gave us what we hoped for and expected.
- Sébastien Bourdais was disappointing for sure, but he went from the top Indycar team to mid field f1 team.
- Cristiano da Matta was the same as Bourdais.
These are all good drivers given good, bad or average cars…
Unrealistic expectations are more to blame for the outcomes…
F1 is a much more closed shop, where getting the right car determines your trajectory, but let’s now kid ourselves about Indycar. Penske and Ganassi are the champion makers. It’s no surprise that Indycar champions drive for these 2 teams.
I’m sure if Grosjean had have been dropped into a Penske straight away, we’d have seen the splashes of “brilliance?”that kept him in f1 for so long, but I’d also expect that by now Roger would have tired of the issues and let him go, Kevin Cogan or Ryan Briscoe style.
Using the Scott Dixon and Will Power as examples seems a bit off, they both took to Indycar straight off, but they also both replaced drivers that their team had lost confidence in, giving their teams a real comfort that they were competent replacements. In both cases they both found their way to Indycar because it was the only way up, then found their way into top teams and fitted in well and were smart enough to stay with the teams. I’m sure we can all pick drivers that might have been magic but didn’t quick click. There’s nothing special about their story, both are great drivers who might have been able to succeed in F1 (depending on what you mean by succeed)…
As discussed, this has more to do with f1 politics, but that’s true of any attempted transition from Indycar into f1 for 30 years. Not to personally knock Sergio Perez, but at least 10 Indycar drivers and at least 10 F1 drivers could all do his job at red bull to his current level (and all would happily do so), and Sergio knows it. Plus, if Sergio wanted to take himself to indycar and was given a Penske seat, he would win.