Forum topics such as these surely does provide alot of entertainment.
Well, I guess time will tell.
Lewis is going to do what he thinks is right. I mean surely in comparative point to when he came into F1, 5 years ago to now, he would have learned alot to make good sound decision.
To say his management influenced him, he doesn't seem the type. He does seem the type that needs to be in control of everything and at the front at it. His body language speaks volumes. Look at how he was in Monza when the rumors broke. I give him thumbs up for being in control of the race that weekend. But he was just not in control of the Media and that bugged him. Then see the stark difference in body language in Singapore, where he took control (with probable good advice from his management and the Mclaren brass) by going on a media blackout on the topic. He was in control on the track and in front of the camera and that spoke volumes in his body language. That are how people who are just born and bread with the absolute will to be the best are. Undeniably the are human beings with ego's the size of mount Everest. Unfortunately none of them can and will ever be good losers. Their only distinction is No.1. Being No.2 is just being the first loser (no matter how much of a good result it is). Alonso is exactly the same. You can see it in Vettel this year. Senna, Prost and Lauda are supreme classic examples (oh can they pout and throw a tantrum when things don't go their way). But that makes them what they are, the absolute unmovable, steam rolling force. The one directional will to win makes them such (I am going so far to say at all cost).
About him not being able to build a team around him, I think that is pretty untrue. Look at his record over this past 5 years. He had 3 different teammates (2 of them world champion and one of them rated one of the best drivers of this generation). Lewis has beaten them in varying degrees (my vote for the team mate who really kept him honest is Alonso, massive respect for that guy). And the factor which helped him do that is building the team around him. We all know he is a great driver, awesome at best. But watch what happened in the season with Alonso. As Alonso self imploded, Lewis kept the team with him and on his side. With Kolvelinen, unfortunately he really did step into team Lewis and just could not lay a dent. This showed in 2008, where Lewis kept the team with him, always managing to setup the same machinery way better then Hekki. Again apparent in 2009, when McLaren just did not have the best car but Lewis was still pulling out some good results and Hekki's best was only a single win at Hungary. 2010 with Button in the fray, Lewis still had the team with him and in a car still not the best was an outside fighter for the championship. 2011 was Button's year of getting more comfy, and Lewis not being in control of his personal life (which made Lewis the pout master and he had not learnt how to manage that against his performance). This year, undeniably one of the best if not the best car, same machinery available to Lewis and Button, Lewis learning from the last year and in a more mature state, and how many times we see Lewis getting the results and Button scratching his head on why he was not (it took 4 total races to figure it out and with the help of some upgrades). And how many times have you heard Button say setup. This is where I think having the team properly function for you plays a huge role. Building the team with you is key as the driver gives the input, but if he has not managed his set of engineers and drive them to use the best skill sets to digest the information and translate to the car, he would have had case Button 2012.
And about the money an endorsement thing, I think it would be absolutely silly of him not to take the opportunity presented to him. Wouldn't any of us? Given the chance to be a global brand, that would outlast his career in F1, make more revenue out of it and be more successful...common, would any of us really say no to that. Its just smart business. Loyalty is one thing, yes. But I doubt he has got anything more to prove in that department. 14 years of his life has been part and parcel with Mclaren, thru alot of thick and thin. This is just a very professional next step. It goes in the mold of being the best. Schumi did it, Senna did it.
Him moving to Mercedes is a sure-fied role of the dice. It is going to go one way or the other. But only people with that believe take the step. Schumi came from a winning Bennaton team to at that time a dog of a Ferrari team. Oh behold the went on the win 6 constructors and 5 WDC championships (please correct my number if it is wrong). All it took was his belief in his step and not looking back.
That's just my opinion. But we are going to have a real entertaining end to this season and a start to the next. That's for sure.
