I think you meant Austria, not Baku.ME4ME wrote:Red Bull aside, Ferrari need to improve in all areas. Reliability has failed them in Austrialia (RAI), Bahrain (VET), Baku (VET), Silverstone (VET) - that's simply too many times. The drivers have under-performed as well, Kimi crashing in Monaco, even Vettel under-performing in qualifying a couple of times. And what to say about strategy, they've made "questionable" decisions to say the least. Worst of all, Ferrari seem to struggle with setting up the car. One weekend they're quick, the next they are no where. Ferrari should look internally and fix the problems, rather then looking externally and compare with Red Bull.
On the subject of under-performing drivers? I don't agree with your assessment at all. The drivers are the least of Ferrari's issues. The two world championship contenders themselves have had poor races. (Rosberg @ Monaco & Canada, Hamilton @ Baku and he's coughed up the start several times) Let's not forget that Ricciardo has been average ever since Monaco and Verstappen himself binned it at Monaco. Raikkonen had a bad race at Monaco and a few mediocre races while Vettel was looking far from a world champion in Silverstone.
The whole deal here is that because the Mercedes-Benz is so dominant, mistakes from their drivers are often masked. Secondly, there was a whole heap of expectations from Ferrari and Vettel in particular to give them a run for their money and that has simply not materialised. So, they've generally been magnified. Verstappen in my view has been exceptionally outstanding in all these circumstances and Ricciardo who I'm a big fan of has tailed off post Monaco.
I think we guys constantly make drivers out to be robots. Unquestionably, Vettel and Ricciardo have been knocked on in terms of confidence with a heap of strategy and reliability failures. It does weigh you down. It's when champions rise and I think once this season is over, both these chaps will be better drivers. The championship is over, it's about how much they can maximise with what they have. Red Bull and Ferrari are neck and neck in my opinion where one will be better than the other depending on the circuit layout.
The media and public can and will no doubt hype the battle up, but both the teams and it's drivers only care about catching Mercedes.