FoxHound wrote:Remember Eddie Irivine at Ferrari? Largely forgettable in no small part to Schumacher. But what happened in 1999?Phil wrote:The car can only be as good as the driver is. Or, with the WCC in mind, as good as the sum of both of your drivers. If you have a driver under contract who represents a long term investment and isn't exactly cheap (Vettel), it makes sense to optimize the strengths of each of your assets to get the maximum.
Schumacher breaks his leg, and Irvine becomes the focus of Ferrari's spearhead and he pushed Hakkinen to final race that year, narrowly missing the title by 3 points.
As a driver, he did not suddenly gain 0.5 seconds speed.
His team made him the focal point, the reference on baseline performance. Those results speak for themselves.
The car was now changed and developed to suit him at a time when testing was unlimited.
Quite telling.
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What you say is completely wrong. Irvine never gained half a second. It is the other way round: Before Schumacher broke his leg Irvine was competitive with not more than 4 tenth, rather 2 tenth deficit. When Schumacher came back he was 1 second faster in Malaysia and 1.5 seconds faster in Japan...
The Ferrari was competitive towards the McLaren just because it was fast and reliable in the race. Just similar to the 2012 season. And, of course, the many faults from Hakkinen.
There was absolutely no development in the direction of Irvine. Just the normal development.