Rob W wrote:... Show me a driver who isn't selfish, self-centred and I'll show you someone who will never be good enough to be at the top...
Well, Rob, I agree with you: on most cases that's true, people who compete tend to center on themselves.
However, if the problem is just to show
a driver, I'm not sure about it, but it seems fair to propose "old timers" like the shy Scot, Jim Clark, "Fat head" ("Cabezón") Froilán González, Juan Manuel Fangio or Tazio Nuvolari, "The master" ("Il Maestro"). Some of them were modest, but some of them maybe went beyond modesty: they seemed really devoted to the well being of others, or so I like to believe.
I know, I know, proposing Nuvolari is stretching it a bit, but, hey, everyone is entitled to one opinion (at least one, in my case...

).
Heck, maybe Regazzoni could qualify, I dare to say. He, who seemed from afar a man devoted to paraplegics while he ran the Paris-Dakkar in a wheelchair: no amount of press manipulation by modern drivers can dream of achieving that hard-to-dispute generosity. Rejected by major teams in his disability, he seemed to be using the last drops of fame toward the benefit others, while he himself was not precisely buoyant.
If that's true (that there were drivers "driven outward") then I conclude (arbitrarily, I concede) that you don't
necessarily have to be a spoiled brat to be a good driver.
Actually, I think some drivers enjoyed (or enjoy) their modesty too much to be declared "true modesty". You know how it is: the kind of people that goes through the world saying or implying they are "the most modest man on Earth".
However, it is impossible for everybody to be the same: I bet some saint must have slipped among the pilot ranks. Perhaps some promoter should be canonized (not in the last decade, I know, but...).
Maybe there are saints even in this forum, you never know. I propose Dave, for example...
About Alonso, I don't know. I think Ron Dennis will evaluate the odds and decide. I'll believe anything about Alonso's moves only when I see team's owners declarations. Meanwhile (and it will be in a short time) I better wait. Most of the declarations and articles seem to bring their venom, trying to discharge all the blame on the World Champion.
I wish to believe (that maybe gives me some points toward sanctity...

) that they are wrong and McLaren behaved like the Three Stoges: I doubt very much that any team cheating with other team's info will be so stupid as to discuss it on e-mail or scanning it...
Now, for some people, the fact that Alonso received info means he did it by despise. Some writers in the news believe we are retarded...
They want us to believe that Alonso managed all the operational aspects of McLaren (McLaren! A team where I imagine not a speck of dust moves without planning!). Surely Dennis seems absent of operation... I imagine is the "need-to-know", as it's called by the American Executive Branch.
Probably Alonso took a couple of wrenches, entered the garage in the middle of the night, fixed the car, and took a couple of laps in the dark by himself. Or better yet, suggested figures out of nowhere to mechanics. Coughlan also did the same, as all chief mechanics do: they simply invent exotic configurations, without giving any reasoning for them to their bosses.
Nobody else knew, according to sworn statements of 140 McLaren employees, as Dennis reminded us. First, it was Coughlan alone. Then it was ONLY Coughlan, Alonso and De La Rosa. The rest of the team is blind and, the best part is they expect these three guys (chief mechanic, chief tester and, let's say it frankly, chief driver) to work "by instinct".
Yeah, sure. I might be a saint, but I don't think I'm stupid.