bhall II wrote:
F1 is not now, nor has it ever been, a driver's Championship .
I think there are a lot of people - former drivers included - who feel as if the driver had a bigger input when he wasn't so guided over the radio.
Constantly being told at any stage of the race the required laptime/for how long/which engine setting to use/how far away to stay from the car essentially makes the driver an automaton, requiring no feel for tyres/circumstances nor ability to weigh the situation in their own mind.
I mention MotoGP, btw, since there was a particularly apt example of the difference radio communication has last year. I'm afraid I forget which race it was, but on a drying track Rossi (and to some extent Lorenzo) stayed on wet tyres long beyond the point where the laptimes of others showed the crossover point had been reached. They should have read their pit boards, sure, but even that is a far less detailed set of information than an F1 driver would get in the same situation. Likewise, Lorenzo would likely have been warned of the damp spots after coming out and safely/boringly not pushed too hard into his error.
And if F1 cars start breaking lap records next year, will it have solved all the ills of the sport? I doubt it. I'd like to see it but it's not the be all end all.