He wasn`t sacked like Perez has just been, Ferrari just decided not to renew his contract, there`s a pretty big difference!
He wasn`t sacked like Perez has just been, Ferrari just decided not to renew his contract, there`s a pretty big difference!
Well, TBH Sainz's performance this season was really good. He was steadily bringing good points, which was crucial for the team to have a shot at WCC. And he landed in Williams, because the top teams were filled. Merc wanted to invest in "future megastar", McLaren has 2 great drivers (even though Oscar was quite uneven this season) and that leaves RB. I just can't fathom, why they considered LAW/TSU/PER over SAI, based purely on driving. Other factors must have come into play.deadhead wrote: ↑20 Dec 2024, 15:39LEC had the worst qualifying performance of his career in 2024 which made SAI “appear” closer to LEC than he actually is.
I don’t see any improvement with Sainz since he joined Ferrari and obviously non of the other top teams saw him as a viable alternative to whatever young talent they were after instead of hiring Sainz.
SAI was a “free agent” for months and non of the top teams wanted him, at least not with whatever he was demanding. If a top team wants you, they make room for you, case in point being HAM coming to Ferrari and one of the drivers being dropped to make way.SharkY wrote: ↑20 Dec 2024, 16:27Well, TBH Sainz's performance this season was really good. He was steadily bringing good points, which was crucial for the team to have a shot at WCC. And he landed in Williams, because the top teams were filled. Merc wanted to invest in "future megastar", McLaren has 2 great drivers (even though Oscar was quite uneven this season) and that leaves RB. I just can't fathom, why they considered LAW/TSU/PER over SAI, based purely on driving. Other factors must have come into play.deadhead wrote: ↑20 Dec 2024, 15:39LEC had the worst qualifying performance of his career in 2024 which made SAI “appear” closer to LEC than he actually is.
I don’t see any improvement with Sainz since he joined Ferrari and obviously non of the other top teams saw him as a viable alternative to whatever young talent they were after instead of hiring Sainz.
On the other hand, I feel that Lewis might bring an improvement over Carlos in one aspect - fight on the track. Looking over past 4 seasons, Carlos didn't strike me as someone, who could particularly well defend or attack for position.
We dont know that yet. That is the hope of many and Ferrari's for sure but the track holds the final verdict. And I'm rooting for Lewis in Ferrari and I think he chose the right team, yet Sainz's 2024 form was not "mid" in my opinion. Also lets not forget Sainz missed a race.
Classifying Sainz as a "mid" driver really damages any credibility you have on this subject.
Vasseur said he's "never seen a pair of teammates so focused on what the other was doing." A few weeks ago, there was a discussion about how it's a bad thing to be so competitive with your teammate, but beating each other and picking up each other's better traits was a huge motivation for both Leclerc and Sainz. The result of this is the fantastic season they had.Farnborough wrote: ↑20 Dec 2024, 15:17Both CS & CL have significantly advanced their own view of their own capabilities over this year I feel. Each arriving at the end of race season more rounded and understanding of their own potential along with how to enact that too.
No credibility claimed, it's just an opinion.JPower wrote: ↑21 Dec 2024, 01:44Classifying Sainz as a "mid" driver really damages any credibility you have on this subject.
There's no "mid" driver staying a tenth off the "best qualifier on the grid" across 90 sessions.
He's been a top 5-7 driver since 2019 by most accounts which is how he found himself at Ferrari in the place. You may not like him personally but at least try to be objective.
You don't have to have to find anyone special. You don't have to think they belong at Ferrari. Just know that without any criteria or basis in reality, it sounds unreasonable and foolish.deadhead wrote: ↑21 Dec 2024, 05:16No credibility claimed, it's just an opinion.JPower wrote: ↑21 Dec 2024, 01:44Classifying Sainz as a "mid" driver really damages any credibility you have on this subject.
There's no "mid" driver staying a tenth off the "best qualifier on the grid" across 90 sessions.
He's been a top 5-7 driver since 2019 by most accounts which is how he found himself at Ferrari in the place. You may not like him personally but at least try to be objective.
I don't see him as anything special. I admit he is a solid racing driver, but doesn't really belong in a Ferrari and I am glad he is being replaced with someone who does. For me his is just another Barichello.
Here’s an interesting hypothetical - slightly off topic but tangential to the above so hopefully folks will indulge me: what would Sainz have achieved in a 2024 McLaren if he’d stayed the course there?JPower wrote: ↑21 Dec 2024, 06:45You don't have to have to find anyone special. You don't have to think they belong at Ferrari. Just know that without any criteria or basis in reality, it sounds unreasonable and foolish.deadhead wrote: ↑21 Dec 2024, 05:16No credibility claimed, it's just an opinion.JPower wrote: ↑21 Dec 2024, 01:44
Classifying Sainz as a "mid" driver really damages any credibility you have on this subject.
There's no "mid" driver staying a tenth off the "best qualifier on the grid" across 90 sessions.
He's been a top 5-7 driver since 2019 by most accounts which is how he found himself at Ferrari in the place. You may not like him personally but at least try to be objective.
I don't see him as anything special. I admit he is a solid racing driver, but doesn't really belong in a Ferrari and I am glad he is being replaced with someone who does. For me his is just another Barichello.
Since Schumacher, Ferrari tried to acquire an elite WDC-capable talent to anchor the team. That shouldn't discredit the rest of the drivers that helped carry the team as well. "Just another Barichello" isn't bad by any means(although Sainz was far closer to his teammate obviously). Sainz exceeded most all expectations coming into the 2021 season and turned out to be the best option for Ferrari as Vettel's replacement. Ricciardo and Bottas were the other two serious options and both flamed out in the ground effect era.
Not one person at Maranello is going to say Sainz didn't represent the team well, maximize his talent, or give 100% until the last lap with the team. I think he more than earned a seat, which is why the only reason to part ways that made sense for next season is to sign arguably the greatest driver in F1 history.
Unless he had LEC in front of him
It's not that Ferrari wouldn't have been 'deserving' winners, and more that they'd been some ultra sneaky winner, more a result of the failures of others than the merits of the Ferrari car as the best.catent wrote: ↑20 Dec 2024, 12:31I agree about the Barcelona development misstep being the decisive factor but think saying "frankly, it's a miracle we were ever really in the fight to begin with ... [Ferrari] absolutely did NOT have the best car this year or anything really all that close" is a bit off-the-mark. McLaren had the best racecar on the balance of the season and Red Bull was a tale of two halves. Ferrari was there or thereabouts for most of it, and absolutely would've been deserving winners of the WCC had they managed to pull it off.Seanspeed wrote: ↑19 Dec 2024, 21:55We can always play hindsight and track down 14 points or more somewhere to say we blew it, but that really ignores that no team is ever perfect throughout a year, especially on such a ludicrously long calendar year.f1316 wrote: ↑19 Dec 2024, 16:45
More than that in practice. With Charles out front and pulling away, the Saint/Perez clash doesn’t happen. Call that at least another 12 points for Ferrari and less for Mclaren whatever Norris gained as a result. Whether you blame strategy or the (later deemed illegal) McLaren rear wing, that was a decisive moment in the WCC, undoubtedly.
I think if anything, the Barcelona upgrade blip had by far the most impact on Ferrari's championship hopes. And frankly, it's a miracle we were ever really in the fight to begin with. Cuz we absolutely did NOT have the best car this year or anything really all that close. We had the fastest car on only a sparing few weekends.
Basically, I dont necessarily see it as Ferrari blowing the WCC, moreso Mclaren nearly bungling what should have been an incredibly clear cut championship win.
I think people have short memories and are being extremely harsh on Lando who got a winning car and championship contention for the first time, in the same year, this year. Every driver has made big mistakes in their first years contending for the title. Think HAM's 2007 season. Max first won a race in 2016 and had an off-and-on winning car ever since but only won his first title in 2021(2022). If Lando had put his car in the wall in the penultimate race while on a clear pole lap or brake tested his rival (like Max did in 2021), people will be gunning for his head.f1316 wrote: ↑21 Dec 2024, 22:43
In 2020 he and Lando were closely matched but I think most would agree (backed up by the data) that Sainz had the edge. The prevailing narrative - especially in the British media - is that Lando made a step change and became a truly top driver. My contention would be that, while he may have improved, the nature of his 2024 errors actually shows he’s much the same driver he was in 2020 - fast but erratic and that, allied to Sainz’s own improvements, would probably mean the status quo remained in McLaren.