I agree with the 1996 car being a dog on top of some pretty horrible unreliability. I remember sitting in Silverstone to enjoy the mighty Schumacher/Ferrari challenge for a grand total of seven laps at which distance both Ferraris had gone up in smoke.xpensive wrote:I think the last (and only?) time MS had a truly uncompetitive cars was in 1996, when John Barnard had misunderstood the side-protection rules with the terrible F310, but he still drove the wheels of that dog to beat the Williams a cople of times!
In my view the 2005 car wasn't up to Schumacher standards either. It wasn't competitive due to the tyre rule changes which had caught out Ferrari badly. The tyres had no grip in qualifying and Michael often had to start in the mid field or he fell back when the Michelins were shining and the Bridgestones were falling apart. The 2005 season was all about tyres and suspension and Ferrari/Bridgestone messed up on both points. It took Ferrari three thirds of the season to Hungary to get their only pole position and that wasn't good enough to translate into a race victory. The only race victory was the farcial 2005 US GP which cannot do anything for the claim that the Ferrari was competitive. It helped to elevate Michael to a third place in the drivers standing with 62 points versus Montoya 60 and Fisichella 58. This trio by the way was roughly on half the points the number one Renault and McLaren drivers collected.
The 2005 Ferrari was horrible and only Schumacher's superior driver effort and Indygate masked that sad fact. I admire him more for his never failing attitude and his solidarity with the team in 2005 than for some of his crushing dominations in the years before. That year is also a good one to compare how Alonso stacks up against Schumacher in adverse conditions. If you remember Alonso's compliments about his 2008 and 2009 cars you will see a big difference in the way the driver does in an uncompetitive car. They both took bigger risks and extracted more from the car than there was in it, but Alonso never fails to point out where the team lets him down while Schumacher goes home, works harder with the engineers and never speaks a bad word about the team.