I said race win bonus, so your first and second points have no relevance. As for the other, where do those bonuses come from? Mercedes. Why do they pay them? Contrary to some people's opinions, not to provide extremely expensive fast cars to young men, but to get some sort of quantifiable market advantage. That advantage stems from dominant wins, crushing other car manufacturers in the process. There's no technological dominance being shown by winning in the manner they did yesterday. Not to mention that there was an actual risk of not winning. One missed braking point or weird attacking move and all 3 could've DNFed.Restomaniac wrote:A few things.alexx_88 wrote:Definitely! It's not like Mercedes has a car that's miles ahead of the competition and literally any of the current F1 drivers would've won the title. Oh, wait...Vettelswonmeover wrote: Lewis should leave the team. They have been unfair and they need to be taught a lesson. Rosberg cannot carry the team to glory on his own. They need that STAR driver. Rosberg is a good driver and deserving of his WDC but he is not in that bracket of Alonso, Lewis, Max and Dani Ric. Plain and simple!
The truth is that these championships belong mostly to the guys at the factory. Even more than Vettel's. That doesn't say anything about Hamilton and Rosberg and their quality as drivers. As such, when you owe so much to those people who have designed and built the car, for whom the race win bonuses are actually important, it's incredibly selfish to act in the way that Lewis did yesterday.
1 Merc have already won the WCC.
2 A Merc driver was winning the WDC
3 The race win was clearly in no doubt.
So the designers and builders were in no danger of losing bonuses.
The whole logic of your arguement is built on nothing as a way to try and deflect away from a team favouring 1 driver and towards a driver rightly trying to win a WDC.
Also in 2017 the regs have changed and we are back more towards an aero spec car with unlimited engine upgrades. You think Merc will still be THAT dominant?
No sane manager accepts a risk with absolutely no potential reward. That's silly. Not to mention the actual downsides that I've listed above.