AnthonyG wrote: ↑09 Oct 2017, 13:21
Jolle wrote: ↑09 Oct 2017, 11:14
With the issues Ferrari had this season, it feels a bit like the eighties/early nineties for me again, when Ferrari's were fast but fragile and the crew generally in chaos. The pre-Jean Todt era. With the drilled operation from McLaren/Dennis and the opportunistic but cleaver approach from Frank Williams.
Thinking of it, maybe this is all part of the big liberty plan, bring back the past: MercedesAMG and RedBull have taken the place of McLaren and Williams very well.
Next up: The old master (Hamilton) with a young, even faster but wild contender (Verstappen) in the same team, winning almost all the races.
This year was the best championship run of the Scuderia in years and the first time someone gave Mercedes a run for their money in the V6 era. They have problems, yes, but I think we should see the positives.
First time in years Ferrari is capable of fighting for the championship.
First time in even more time I see Ferrari being able to follow Mercedes(or any other team) in the in-season development war.
Those are for me the most postive aspects of this season, the ending is being very underwhelming but I do hope the Italians will keep doing the same good job, and hopefully, better in 2018.