I find that highly unlikely, as Merc is a perfect fit for his lifestyle. If I had to place a bet, I think it would be more likely he drives Nico out.Phillyred wrote:I think once they have the constructor's championship locked up then we'll see some activity. Honestly though, I think Lewis should seek greener pastures after this year despite his contract through 2018. I think a seat at Ferrari would be nice.
Agreed about the lifestyle aspect, but I just wonder how much longer Mercedes can stay on top and give Lewis the car he needs to challenge for more WDCs.dans79 wrote:I find that highly unlikely, as Merc is a perfect fit for his lifestyle. If I had to place a bet, I think it would be more likely he drives Nico out.Phillyred wrote:I think once they have the constructor's championship locked up then we'll see some activity. Honestly though, I think Lewis should seek greener pastures after this year despite his contract through 2018. I think a seat at Ferrari would be nice.
That was what I was saying I thought? Not good from ham to do that and not good from Niki to tell the press, especially when Ham is doing the upmost to keep any form of dissatisfaction contained within the team.FoxHound wrote:@jolle
Lauda spilling the beans in this makes him far from innocent.
They did it publicly after Belgium '14. Didn't work. They will keep this internally. That's why the only statements and interviews about it was in very general terms. Only Niki, right after slipped up with saying "looks like Nico". After Barcelona the same, even the drivers were very quiet.Gettingonabit wrote:I find this talk about Rosberg being the fall guy at Merc strange, how can anyone be sure it isn't Ham that would get the chop? I haven't seen anything in what Toto has said that indicates it would necessarily be Ros.
If his position was tenuous in the team I would have expected Toto to at least apportion the blame for Austria to the guilty party - but he hasn't.
Or have I missed something?
Lewis already has a very large contract, that would probably cost Merc a lot of Money to cancel. Nico's contract is up at the end of the season, and he hasn't signed an extension yet. Also, Merc would take a larger PR/marketing hit for firing Lewis.Gettingonabit wrote:I find this talk about Rosberg being the fall guy at Merc strange, how can anyone be sure it isn't Ham that would get the chop? I haven't seen anything in what Toto has said that indicates it would necessarily be Ros.
If his position was tenuous in the team I would have expected Toto to at least apportion the blame for Austria to the guilty party - but he hasn't.
Or have I missed something?
I don't agree with the PR bit. Firing the wild kid can almost have a positive effect, firing the calm family man always has a negative effect.dans79 wrote:Lewis already has a very large contract, that would probably cost Merc a lot of Money to cancel. Nico's contract is up at the end of the season, and hasn't signed an extension yet. Also Merc would also take a larger PR/marketing hit for firing Lewis.Gettingonabit wrote:I find this talk about Rosberg being the fall guy at Merc strange, how can anyone be sure it isn't Ham that would get the chop? I haven't seen anything in what Toto has said that indicates it would necessarily be Ros.
If his position was tenuous in the team I would have expected Toto to at least apportion the blame for Austria to the guilty party - but he hasn't.
Or have I missed something?
What would be the PR effect of firing the massively successful black guy and keeping the much less successful white guy? Positive or negative?Jolle wrote:I don't agree with the PR bit. Firing the wild kid can almost have a positive effect, firing the calm family man always has a negative effect.dans79 wrote:Lewis already has a very large contract, that would probably cost Merc a lot of Money to cancel. Nico's contract is up at the end of the season, and hasn't signed an extension yet. Also Merc would also take a larger PR/marketing hit for firing Lewis.Gettingonabit wrote:I find this talk about Rosberg being the fall guy at Merc strange, how can anyone be sure it isn't Ham that would get the chop? I haven't seen anything in what Toto has said that indicates it would necessarily be Ros.
If his position was tenuous in the team I would have expected Toto to at least apportion the blame for Austria to the guilty party - but he hasn't.
Or have I missed something?
The problem is only that Rosberg has the unwanted behavior, not Hamilton.
I agree with you that MB has the best two characters to refelect their wide range of products and image. I think Hamilton especially did a great deal to make MB less boring.Just_a_fan wrote:What would be the PR effect of firing the massively successful black guy and keeping the much less successful white guy? Positive or negative?Jolle wrote:I don't agree with the PR bit. Firing the wild kid can almost have a positive effect, firing the calm family man always has a negative effect.dans79 wrote:
Lewis already has a very large contract, that would probably cost Merc a lot of Money to cancel. Nico's contract is up at the end of the season, and hasn't signed an extension yet. Also Merc would also take a larger PR/marketing hit for firing Lewis.
The problem is only that Rosberg has the unwanted behavior, not Hamilton.
Or how about firing the Brit and keeping the German just after the Brexit vote? Remembering also that the team is British in all but name.
Dropping the champion has been done before, of course. Notably, Williams did it twice: first with Mansell and later with Hill. Both Brits dropped by a Brit team having just won the title. Then, of course, it was about salary demands and Williams has never paid his drivers top dollar.
The reality is that the Hamilton/Rosberg relationship is marketing gold for Mercedes. They're in the media constantly because of it but not in a bad way, really. Compare Ferrari and Mercedes currently. Who would you rather be - the famous supercar maker or the boring saloon car maker beating them even with two battling drivers? Toto might be hating it but I bet the MB board aren't.
It depends on the demographic you are targeting with your pr/marketing.Jolle wrote: I don't agree with the PR bit. Firing the wild kid can almost have a positive effect, firing the calm family man always has a negative effect.
The problem is only that Rosberg has the unwanted behavior, not Hamilton.
Complete and utter nonsense easily disproved with unpleasant reality. Count how many times Mercedes wanted Hamilton to win in the last season 2 and (the horror of actual world) he actually did, against as you eloquently put home grown (list below). Brawn didn't put Hamilton there anyway, Lauda and Ecclestone did.PlatinumZealot wrote:Toto said the crash in Austria has no bearing on Nico's contract because he has allowed the drivers to race and he can easily fix it all with team orders. I think Nico is here to stay. It is Lewis I feel will bail out after things get too awkward. The owners want the home grown German boy to win not the cuckoo that Ross Brawn put in the nest.
Code: Select all
- team orders not used in Hungary on a different strategy to lose a win and disadvantage a driver who only lost the lead through
- lying about the reasons "We cannot ask either driver to give up positions or jeopardise their own championship chances for the benefit of the team."
- team orders used in Monaco against the leading driver on the same strategy in favour of Hamilton
- different reactions to Spa and on the other hand to Spain (without a doubt biggest of them all), Bahrain, USA, Japan, the real world of internal penalty against Rosberg and zero or small reaction against Hamilton. Every single one of the those ends in collision caused by Hamilton had Rosberg stayed on track or not braked
- strategy - Barcelona, Bahrain '14 (save fuel and different tyres) , Australia '15 (save fuel to attack on the last lap), Silverstone '15 (wrong pitstop when Rosberg was quicker and closing) when Hamilton was in front, something opposite when it was Rosberg in front (USA, Brazil or indeed Austria '16 tyres and undercut) Can find more but how about you provide some examples?
- engine and other problems of unprecedented magnitude that started at Monza (two engine failures), continued in Russia (bizarre pedal malfunction) and Japan '15 (engine at the start) that decided '15 championship
- Singapore "servicing substance contamination" at the crucial late stage of '14, that was one of most important elements deciding championship, it happens to Hamilton Rosberg is most likely WC
- reaction to Hamilton's excuses after getting thoroughly beaten and outpaced by Rosberg in the last part of the '15 season and him lying about strategy (nothing wrong with those as proven in Brazil), invented very late and backwards car excuses (minor pre Singapore changes) I don't recall any investigations into Rosberg's slumps in form. Would that be unequal treatment based on nationality to you?
Vettel won't want Hamilton in the other car.Phillyred wrote:I think once they have the constructor's championship locked up then we'll see some activity. Honestly though, I think Lewis should seek greener pastures after this year despite his contract through 2018. I think a seat at Ferrari would be nice.