Times have changed though.
If you got pole before 2012 you were very likely to get at least a podium. These days with the different tyres, it is very much a different deal.
I never said he is the only one that received praise, so stop being silly. Alonso received more praise for his driving in 2012 than any other driver. Team principles, fans, pundits - the majority of these all voted for Alonso as the best driver last year. So don't try and paint the picture any differently.mnmracer wrote:Let's be realistic here, don't try and make out that Alonso is the only one that received praise for his drive that year.
I'm not making the opposite statement. I just think these things are not easy to judge.Since you're making the opposite statement (2012 showed Alonso's pace, not Massa's), why don't you answer your own question
Same could be said about any car. Dirty air affects all cars, not just the Red Bull.mnmracer wrote: The Red Bull in essence, most certainly in 2011, is a car that doesn't work in dirty air, so anyone not being able to put in those blistering qualifying laps, would have already not been able to get those race performances.
So even after that line, you still don't get it?Gerhard Berger wrote:I never said he is the only one that received praise, so stop being silly. Alonso received more praise for his driving in 2012 than any other driver. Team principles, fans, pundits - the majority of these all voted for Alonso as the best driver last year. So don't try and paint the picture any differently.mnmracer wrote:Let's be realistic here, don't try and make out that Alonso is the only one that received praise for his drive that year.
Technically, I know it just as much as everyone praising Alonso knows how bad the F2012 actually was. We don't. But we can judge the way they executed their performance, the close-ness of other cars, and the relative performance of their team-mates.Gerhard Berger wrote:You still didn't answer the first part of my post. You originally claimed that Vettel 2011 and Schumacher 2004 were the best drives you've ever seen over a single season because they made their respective cars look more dominant than they actually were. The question is, how do you know how dominant each car actually was?
Everyone can see the on boards where Red Bulls with open DRS are not keeping up with Force India's. Everyone can see the more massive drop in performance as soon as they are in traffic, where a Ferrari cruises by others on top speed. I'm not going to debate this generally acknowledged bit of information, just as I wouldn't debate someone picking an argument saying the world is flat.Gerhard Berger wrote:Same could be said about any car. Dirty air affects all cars, not just the Red Bull.mnmracer wrote: The Red Bull in essence, most certainly in 2011, is a car that doesn't work in dirty air, so anyone not being able to put in those blistering qualifying laps, would have already not been able to get those race performances.
And i guess you missed Webber's race in China, or Vettel's overtakes in Spa and Monza.
I see. So it's not the "making the car look more dominant than it actually was" but simply making the car look better than it actually is. In that case, why not Mansell in 1992 then? and that's just 1 of many examples.Technically, I know it just as much as everyone praising Alonso knows how bad the F2012 actually was. We don't. But we can judge the way they executed their performance, the close-ness of other cars, and the relative performance of their team-mates.
We're not talking about top speed or gearing, so i don't see the relevence of what happens when the Red Bull has DRS open.mnmracer wrote:Everyone can see the on boards where Red Bulls with open DRS are not keeping up with Force India's. Everyone can see the more massive drop in performance as soon as they are in traffic, where a Ferrari cruises by others on top speed. I'm not going to debate this generally acknowledged bit of information, just as I wouldn't debate someone picking an argument saying the world is flat.Gerhard Berger wrote:Same could be said about any car. Dirty air affects all cars, not just the Red Bull.mnmracer wrote: The Red Bull in essence, most certainly in 2011, is a car that doesn't work in dirty air, so anyone not being able to put in those blistering qualifying laps, would have already not been able to get those race performances.
And i guess you missed Webber's race in China, or Vettel's overtakes in Spa and Monza.
If a Ferrari, or another top-speed car, is capable of doing faster, their top speed can help them overtake, and continue doing fast laps.Gerhard Berger wrote:We're not talking about top speed or gearing, so i don't see the relevence of what happens when the Red Bull has DRS open.
You have a very simplistic idea of F1 if you think Ferrari's just cruise by others because of top speed.
it's nothing like saying the world is flat. Stop being ridiculous.
that's more about gearing rather than the aerodynamic effect of running in dirty air (your initial claim was the RB7 did not work in dirty air). One could easily make a case that shorter gearing was more beneficial in the race than in qualifying due to the limited DRS in the former.mnmracer wrote:If a Ferrari, or another top-speed car, is capable of doing faster, their top speed can help them overtake, and continue doing fast laps.Gerhard Berger wrote:We're not talking about top speed or gearing, so i don't see the relevence of what happens when the Red Bull has DRS open.
You have a very simplistic idea of F1 if you think Ferrari's just cruise by others because of top speed.
it's nothing like saying the world is flat. Stop being ridiculous.
If a Red Bull is doing faster laps, but lacks the top speed to pass a slower car in front, they can not continue doing fast laps.
Copse, Turn 8 Turkey etc.mnmracer wrote:This mantra is repeated over and over for the last 2 years, yet when asked about it, no one ever knows what "things" could be taken flat-out that others could not, apart from 1 corner (last in Barcelona).
So please, for the quality of this discussions, as I trust that you know what you are talking about, please tell us what corners other than turn 16 in Barcelona, could Red Bull take flat out where others could not?
Yep, copse was flat in 7th gear. Also turn 9 in barcelona flat in 6th gear. That is for RB6 of course. RB7 had nowhere near the downforce of its predecessor.SectorOne wrote: Copse, Turn 8 Turkey etc.
I´m not comparing the RB6 and RB7 downforce with each other. I´m comparing it with the competitition in their respective years.Juzh wrote:RB7 had nowhere near the downforce of its predecessor.
First of all there is nothing easy in F1.SectorOne wrote:I´m not comparing the RB6 and RB7 downforce with each other. I´m comparing it with the competitition in their respective years.Juzh wrote:RB7 had nowhere near the downforce of its predecessor.
And i´m really not having a go at Vettel, he drove perfectly in 2011 but for me those type of years are considered easy years.
2010 would have been another easy year if it weren´t for reliability.
2013 looks to me like his most impressive year although the competition STILL after 4,5 years not one single team has managed to consistently beat the Red Bull.
Mclaren is the only one that was even remotely close but we all know how that ended.
I saw him race a number of times in F1 cars , as well as frequently in other classes ...it was the era when the F1 drivers turned out in the supporting races1158 wrote:Don't know how many have seen Peter Windsor's blog, but the link has so far been a fascinating read:
http://peterwindsor.com/category/jim-cl ... 63-season/
The more I read about Clark the more I wish I could have seen him race.