example wrote:raymondu999 wrote:After the race today I feel that my suggestions that McLaren will not favor Hamilton in the WDC hunt have been vindicated.
I've said that if and when McLaren knows of a Hamilton departure, then that will kill any and all plans of team orders - though others ridiculed me. McLaren has a past of chasing realistic titles, and if its unrealistic (but mathematically possible) they seem to just let it go. Case in point, trying to win the 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix with Jenson.
Lewis will probably still get the same upgrades as Jenson, and his engineers and mechanics will still do their best for him, but forget any and all possibility of McLaren hurting Jenson's chances for Lewis. Heck his developmental feedback is probably not going to be heeded any more - they'd rather develop the car more towards Jenson now.
Well Jenson is just behind Webber, Lewis winning WDC would also bring WCC. But I guess Mclaren don't like winning trophies.
If it takes McLaren to swap positions for Lewis to win the WDC - then the points they get for those positions aren't going to change either. A 1-2 or 2-3 result for McLaren is still worth the same number of points either way.
I'm a massive McLaren fan, have been since I first started watching in 1995. But IMO Ron Dennis has a habit of holding, for lack of a better word, grudges - and burning bridges. When has a McLaren driver ever left for another team and returned to the team?
I don't think McLaren will hinder Hamilton - but I don't think they'd hinder Button to help Hamilton. I think at this point they don't care about Hamilton's WDC hunt. They'll do their best, they won't hinder Button though - if Lewis wins it good for him. If he doesn't, then oh well.
Other than a short burst of glory, unfortunately - there are no benefits to winning a WDC. The benefit is all in having a reigning WDC.