turbof1 wrote:I think it will certainly help Vettel's image. We had quite a few people claiming Vettel could only win due Adrian Newey designing the car. Those people got proven wrong.
I hate to be the one to bring this up, but there have been many comments. Those that are on that side of the argument that Vettel could only win due to Adrian Newey designing the cars, were probably not refering to singular wins, but championships. The relevance to Newey designing the cars have been in the context of the EBD car matching Vettels ability perfectly - at least to the sense that he excelled in them, compared to his team-mate Webber, our only yard-stick to compare him to, who clearly struggled. This was shown throughout the 4 winning seasons at RedBull - then when the car exploited this effect the most, and in other parts of the season when it didn't. Then the 2014 season came along and went a long way in establishing that in a car clearly not to his liking, the ability of the 4 times world-champion were at times subpar, especially in comparison to his team-mate Ricciardo. This reinforced the thought that perhaps his prior 4 championship wins were helped by the car and the advantage he held in it. His win under the Malaysian Grand-Prix under an entirely different car, with different strengths, characteristics and a different team-mate to messure him against go neither way in disputing those points or doubts.
Still, he is a 4 times world-champion and personally, I don't think a 2014 season in a car that didn't match his ability should put too much doubt behind his achievements. Neither should his win in Malaysia over his 2014 season or the 4 seasons before. They are different cars, different teams, different circumstances. It's why comparing drivers over different regulation periods is difficult and IMO a waste of time. Schumacher's return should have shown us one thing: That over big regulation changes, drivers are met with very different challenges. Even he who we regard as one of the greats of the sport, struggled after his comeback and I'm not convinced it was the age that let him down.
The point that remains is that some drivers probably have a wider operating window than others; Some require a car to their ability more so than others. Doesn't mean that a driver with a narrow ability can't outshine a different one with more natural talent on a given day. There are way too many factors that influence the outcome of a race, or an entire season.
I do have to say; I'll be most interested in seeing how he will fair vs. Kimi. Although I hope what I saw at Ferrari after Vettels win are not signs that might lead to favoritism. Kimi is already quite a bit behind and has had a fair share of badluck. I can't wait to see a straight battle between them, during qualifying and the race.