I agree. To my knowledge Gutierrez is a fairly decent development driver, apparently Hülkenberg often copied his setup after FP1 or FP2 in 2013.Manoah2u wrote:Well despite Esteban really not showing much progress and competition in the past years - compared to Sergio who is more reckless but performs a lot better - that doesn't really mean there isn't a place for Sergio in F1. A reserve and test driver role isn't that bad actually. Each driver has its qualities - take Pedro De La Rosa for example. Nice guy, very insightfull for testing purposes, a real asset there - but in race craft - not so much. Not bad, but not noteworthy either.
Now Esteban may not be such a race performer, but that doesn't mean he isn't usefull as a test/reseve driver/development driver. He has gotten some experience under his belt, mainly with different Ferrari powerplants (V8 and V6T), he has learned to 'control' his car in varying circumstances and has a feel of the machinery. And most of all; he has direct experience with recent 2014 machinery.
But since he's still young, he's bound to a race seat somewhere else representing Ferrari. Just like Kobayashi and Fisichella, he might drive another 458 Italia in the WEC. So, he gets time in testing for Ferrari F1 AND he has a seat for Ferrari in the WEC; he'll then have experience in both categories. If someday F1 doesn't turn out to be his future, he still has proven qualities in WEC. So he then might put himself up for a spot in a team racing in the LMP1 class. Still a lot better than what Van Der Garde is going through.Racer X wrote:That isnt a bad road for Esteban i guess that isnt a bad road for him to take given that if he cant find a real seat it doesnt hurt to spend a year learning at Ferrari. Next year maybe they can get him another shot at a midfield team. But i dont see him getting a shot in Ferrari reserve drivers hardly ever get a chance in teams they are reserves for.....
I actually have some ratings for Sutil. I think Esteban did a stellar job matching him. The advantage he has over Fisichella and Badoer is that he has raced a current spec car (unlike Badoer had) and he will get tonnes of time testing in an acutal Ferrari (unlike Fisichella). I can see him developing quite well if he has the right attitude.acosmichippo wrote:I was mainly responding to PlatinumZealot's point that EG is next in line for a race seat when Kimi retires. He wasn't good enough for Sauber, why would he be good enough for a Ferrari race seat? I agree a test/reserve seat is a good place for him, at least until a better young driver comes along, which will surely happen.
Not just that, but he will spend more time in the simulator compared to the racing drivers, which will generally result in a more insightfull view between simulator and real life results. This is important for Ferrari because in the past, the simulator and computer models turned out to not actually have the expected result in real life. I don't believe this is solely to blame on the driver, but to the computers aswell, but the better a driver can feedback data, the better the results.PlatinumZealot wrote:I actually have some ratings for Sutil. I think Esteban did a stellar job matching him. The advantage he has over Fisichella and Badoer is that he has raced a current spec car (unlike Badoer had) and he will get tonnes of time testing in an acutal Ferrari (unlike Fisichella). I can see him developing quite well if he has the right attitude.acosmichippo wrote:I was mainly responding to PlatinumZealot's point that EG is next in line for a race seat when Kimi retires. He wasn't good enough for Sauber, why would he be good enough for a Ferrari race seat? I agree a test/reserve seat is a good place for him, at least until a better young driver comes along, which will surely happen.
win & win!kptaylor wrote:So hire GUT for the cash and VER for the actual role?