Schuttelberg wrote: ↑30 Oct 2017, 10:50
Redragon wrote: ↑30 Oct 2017, 10:45
Schuttelberg wrote: ↑30 Oct 2017, 10:24
Why on earth will either of those teams hire him?
Both the teams you mentioned have already an A-List driver and for the second seats they're grooming Ocon and Leclerc. Also, there's no reason for Ferrari to hire someone who damaged their brand so much.
If Alonso damaged so much Ferrari why the Italian fans want him back. At least he wasn't chrasing his car against others in an unprofessional fustration manner eg Baku 2017!
I haven't read one quote anywhere from the Scuderia that they're courting Alonso. To say the 'Italians' want him back is highly generic and not something I want to indulge in. Your Baku jibe is even more futile as it has nothing to do with the contract situations. If Ferrari were so 'frustrated' with the 'unprofessionalism' of their driver, they wouldn't have offered him a contract renewal of 3 years.
Also, just going by history and in fact the current situation at McLaren, Alonso has a lasting and negative impact on teams. The team he's at has been blackmailed by him. Remember? But, you won't remember that. You only remember tales of 'professionalism.'
I think it's funny when someone use the argument that Alonso has done more harm than good in each team that he was on.
The internet is full of interviews and quotes of people who had work with him in the past with Renault, Mclaren 2007, Ferrari and now. Every single one of them praise how Alonso can make the team work around him just by his sheer talent, without recurring to politics. Or about his work ethics, how professional he is.
You must be following Ferrari since 2015 to not put in consideration what a mess they were before that. The problematic cars since 2010, the wind tunnel correlations, poor car development through a season and many others..
Alonso opted to leave Ferrari when he had one more year in on contract, mainly because they had ******* Mattiaci! Who, him I agree, didnt like Alonso very much.
2007 is a case apart. What an absolute mess that was, but blackmailed? This is just a rumour. What actually happen, although is a little bleak was:
Alonso didn't actually blackmail Ron Dennis.
He did threaten to do it whilst they were having a heated argument on the Saturday evening of Hungary 2007. But he never actually did it. However, the argument panicked Ron Dennis who went to the FIA, just in case Alonso went through with his threat, thinking it to be the safer option and obviously deeply mistrusting Alonso. And then Spy-Gate happened.
And if you think that the guy who said that "We are fighting Alonso not Raikkonen" was in the right, think again.