xpensive wrote:When in total agreement with seg of course, I just wonder what incentives and arguments were going around in the Daimler boardroom? What made them do something this stupid after enjoying fifteen straight seasons of sucess with McLaren, could it be a case of Norbert Haug's ego, that he was beginning to look at Ron Dennis and Martin Whitmarch thinking, "I can do that"?
Like one Mario Theissen perhaps?
It could be Xpensive, it´s a creditable argument, but I don´t think that´s the case.
I think (don´t know !) it´s more that Mercedes didn´t want to share the limelight with McLaren any longer. Just beeing seen as a engine supplier.
So, yes I think ego, is part of it, but not so much on the side of Norbert Haugg.
Sure, and I have no doubt about that, to win a WDC/WCC as Mercedes GP and if possible with M.S.(but this is unlikely, that´s why they have Nico) would be the centre piece of his professional life.
But if he would be after the glory, he would not hire Brawn as team principal. IMO
After this (which I think will take a minimun of 3-5 years), he will sail into the sunset, and look back and be proud of what he has achieved, bringing Mercedes back into F1 and make them win in F1.
I agree, that BrawnGP is not the bargin, it looked like - far from.
But if they wanted to become MGP, after seeing that Ron Dennis would not sell McLaren to them(which would have been the better option IMHO), what would be the alternatives?
Applying as a new team? Bying Sauber (in terms of infrastructure, this would be the better option IMO)?
I think/hope, they have a long term plan, because it is unlikely that they will dominate F1 in the short term, but I would not rule out that they get there one day.
And I can see value in this approach for them, see/ask Ferrari.
But sure as hell, it will cost them money, blood and sweat to go there.
As long as they show a upwards trend, I think they will do o.k., but they need to be in the top 3 next year, and be on the podium on merrit/pace regulary.
Thankfully the global economy and the automotive industry has recovered a bit from the 2007/2008 crisis, so they have a little bit breathing space now.
It was close for Mercedes to pull out of F1 and the DTM (where the have been beaten by Audi in the last 3 years) at the end of 2008 - very close. Ever wondered why the 2009 DTM season started so late?
At the moment I think, they have a bit room to manouver and would look like fools if the throw in the towel now. Good things take a while.
But if another global crisis rocks the industry in the next couple of years, all bets are off. IMHO