proteus wrote: ↑09 Feb 2018, 14:32
Toyota was a team that had one of the biggest budgets and investements when they came to the sport and jet they were never serious contenders for winning the championships. Ferrari has the biggest budget of all teams in the last few years and most they were able to achieve was second.
Its not all about the money. Money definetly helps, but its useless if u use it for the wrong purposes.
I agree, teams can misspend money or use it inefficiently. I don't believe McLaren comes under that category (neither do RBR or Mercedes mind, still undecided about Ferrari), I was very impressed by the way Honda's cash injection translated quickly into a more competitive chassis. However in a year or two if the income doesn't hit Honda-era levels people will be laid off and that will have a direct impact on chassis development.
Conversely its extremely rare for a team to compete and win with a markedly smaller budget. The only examples I can think of are Brawn which raced with probably the single most expensive car in terms of development costs in history but couldn't develop it through the season and scraped the championship, or FI and Williams in the hybrid era which made the most of the advantage customer Merc engines held over even works Renaults and Ferraris.
Incidentally Toyota's budget wasn't as big as people claim it was except for the first few years including before they entered. They spent a lot of money building up infrastructure then once the factory was as they liked it they cut the budget down to upper midfield level. I think by the time they pulled out the team was starting to show a performance proportional to the budget.
Ferrari has always had issues translating its huge budget into wins but they are very rarely out of championship contention, almost never out of the top 3.
McLaren's budget with Honda put them in a hole behind the top 3 but ahead of almost everyone else. Renault now roughly spend the same as McLaren so it will be interesting to see how the two compare. But it would be foolish to ignore what would happen if McLaren fails to obtain 70-80 million per year by the time the investors decide to stop plugging the funding hole.