Schuttelberg wrote:Ahh! No need to apologize mate, I've debated with you enough to know you didn't mean to be aggressive.
Thanks! It was a bit of fustration showing through after I think iotar already brought up that particular race a couple of times...
Schuttelberg wrote:My only point is that if you want to be a World Driver's Champion, sometimes you must be a rebel, a ruthless selfish individual to prosper and while Rosberg was a complete gentleman in letting Hamilton go and doing the right thing for those 600+ employees, he's handed the momentum back to Hamilton and that's the most dangerous thing to do. Personally, the points gap is never going to be a fuss considering how dominant the Mercedes is and how enormous Lewis' talent is. The fuss is going to be the mindset, the confidence and the morale and I'm convinced that after the qualifying in Monaco, Lewis was very very downbeat. His frustration had begun showing and that's the time to drive him further into the ground.
As for a new Mercedes-Benz contract? I think Nico is a wealthy man, plus I have no doubt that if he were let go by them, Rosberg would be very very attractive to the likes of Ferrari and Renault (both works teams). Also, judging from your posts, you seem to be a veteran who's followed the sport for donkey's years and after three years of being beaten by Lewis, a fourth in progress, a fresh challenge might be just what Rosberg needs! The biggest draw for me to believe he should have said 'no' was the fact that I believe (like most people) that when the Monaco race began, this was probably the year Rosberg could be WDC. I frankly don't see him doing it any more, at least not at Mercedes.
I agree completely, in fact you're spot on. I think I've said pretty much the same in the Mercedes team thread earlier, post Barcelona. That move he pulled off there, was dangerous, wrong and ruthless. In fact, IMO worthy of a disqualification (because he was handicapped by the wrong mode and in such a circumstance, pulling off a blocking move is a big no-go). And yet, it was brilliant, decisive, necessary. It, together with other moves Rosberg pulled off this year, like in Australia when he pushed him wide and off the track, cemented him in my eyes as this years WDC. With that 43 point lead, then that ruthless maneuver in Barcelona, he achieved a couple of things. He kept the gap as is and therefore made it even more difficult to close on paper, but even more importantly, he sent a key message to Lewis that he will not yield and will rigorously defend his position.
How quickly it all changed. As you say, moving over in Monaco was a big no-go from his point of view. But you know what? I think the damage was done regardless if he had let Hamilton pass or not. Monaco is his race and already last year, Hamilton showed incredible pace, on a track where Rosberg historically always has been very strong. Then in those conditions, fighting with the car, the walls, prospect of binning it and suffering a DNF and losing 18 points to Hamilton? I think it can be quite scary having to drive a car like that. Even scarier when you then have Hamilton right on your gearbox, trying to attack at every moment, oozing with confidence in those conditions. The order just cemented the worst-possible-outcome for him - having to let him go, then watching Hamilton to go on and win the race. In his mind at that point, he was still counting on a 3rd place to Hamiltons 2nd, a 3 point decrease. Peanuts. If only it did...
Unfortunately for Rosberg, Monaco was a lose-lose for him given those circumstances. If he had not let Hamilton pass, I think the repercussion would have been big. From one from Toto, but more importantly, by the very own team that fought hard to get the best possible result. Who knows what effect that would have had in the long run, over the course of a season? We've already seen in 2014 what kind of momentum shift that crash in Spa caused...
And F1, beyond anything, is always a team-sport. You win and lose with them. So who knows, maybe it's not all that bad. He scored some good points with Mercedes that day (Zetsche said so something post Monaco race) that might also have helped with the driver-contract his after. And dare I say, Rosberg is good enough to take the fight to Hamilton. If he weren't, he wouldn't have had those 7 wins in succession coming from last year, he wouldn't have nearly won 2014 and not have contested as closely as he did in 2015. I do believe Hamilton is that tiny bit better on average, but there's more to a driver than just raw talent. And given there's not much in it, I think this season is still right open for both to contest for. And at any time, a DNF for either could change the dynamics, the momentum again.