This^. I agree with you on the Sutil move, still not sure about Petrov's situation.Skip wrote:Ricciardo to Caterham.
Petrov to HRT.
Sutil to DTM mercedes.
van der garde to Williams
Thankfully, it's neither me nor you who are making the big decisions in F1, but people who actually know about these things. Imagine an alternate F1 universe where De La Rosa has a successful F1 career because of his charisma and Hamilton can turn piss into wine and establish world peace if you will, and I'll stick with my view that Kimi and Kubica are among the most popular F1 drivers of the current generation even when they are not actually racing in F1!ringo wrote:
It's all about how you communicate to the media, the fans, and if you are charismatic. Robert and Kimi have none of that.
The safest driver off track, Hamilton, is a Holywood Mogul in terms of F1. Even Pedro De la Rosa has more Buzz than Kubica.
Quite right. Twitter wires crossed!Holm86 wrote:JET: I read it as he was going to test a 2010 car which would make it the F60.
2010 car is F10. F60 is 2009.Holm86 wrote:JET: I read it as he was going to test a 2010 car which would make it the F60.
Wiki wrote:
After Formula Renault, Kubica moved to the Formula Three Euro Series. However, his move was delayed by a road accident which left him with a broken arm, and titanium screws holding it together. At his delayed debut at Norisring, Kubica, driving with a plastic brace and 18 titanium bolts in his arm, won the race.
I'd put money on him making a recovery as opposed to not if I had to choose one or the other. I doubt there will be any mental issue, if anything keeps him I think it will be for completely physical reasons.more Wiki wrote:
At the Canadian Grand Prix Kubica had a serious crash approaching the hairpin on lap 27, in which his car made contact with Jarno Trulli's Toyota, and hit a hump in the grass which lifted the car's nose into the air and left him unable to brake or steer. The car then hit the concrete retaining wall and rolled as it came back across the track, striking the opposite wall on the outside of the hairpin and coming to rest on its side.[11] The speed measured when his car clipped the barrier was 300.13 km/h (186.49 mph), at a 75-degree angle, subjecting Kubica to an average deceleration of 28 g. After data from the onboard accident data recorder had been analysed it was found that he had been subjected to a peak G-force of 75 G.[12] Under safety car conditions, Kubica was removed from the car and taken to the circuit's medical centre, where he was announced to be "stable", although no information regarding potential injuries was known at this time. Shortly afterwards, his manager Daniele Morelli said Kubica was conscious and talking.[13] It was initially reported that Kubica could have a broken leg.[14] However, Mario Theissen later confirmed that he was not seriously injured.[15][16] Further reports from late evening on race day, directly from the hospital, confirmed that Kubica had suffered a light concussion alongside a sprained ankle. After being kept in overnight for observation, Kubica left hospital the following day.[17] On 14 June it was announced that as a precaution, Kubica would not race at the United States Grand Prix and would be replaced by test driver Sebastian Vettel.[18] After missing Indianapolis, he returned for the French Grand Prix where he qualified and finished in fourth place, receiving ITV broadcaster Martin Brundle's driver of the day award. He then went on to finish fourth again at the British Grand Prix.
Everyone is different in his/hers way of dealing with trauma after accidents. Kubica's history tells a lot about his way of dealing with it, it's by coming back stronger than before.ringo wrote:And if he fails the tests miserably?
I don't think drivers are the same after life threatening accidents.
Even Perez never felt 100% for many races and his accident was nothing compared to Robert's.
Ferrari will also be weary knowing that Massa isn't the same driver, and to go to another write off chassis driver can be a big drag on the operation.
If he's good enough to be Alonso's #2, then he may get the drive. But if he struggles i don't really see him in F1 in the future.
2013 is a lot of time though. He should be able to reach a respectable level. But then there's money and sponsorship.