Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Aug 2018, 23:33
Jolle wrote: ↑16 Aug 2018, 23:20
Of course he's frustrated. He should be (most of all in his own mind) be fighting with Hamilton and Vettel for race wins and/or championships but for the last four/five seasons he's been fighting with Wehrlein, Palmer, Erickson, etc etc.
He isn't in the best car today because he has history. Vettel and Hamilton might be prima donnas from time to time but they don't play the political games that Alonso plays. They don't torpedo their team in order to make a point, for example. Alonso was in F1 too late - he would have fitted in much better in the 80s and 90s when Prost, PIquet, Mansell, Senna were playing their various games (Mansell was rubbish at the political games, of course). Alonso in the late 80s/early 90s would have been fabulous. Sadly, for him, he was between two eras.
Oh, I'm the first one to agree that it's Alonso's own fault that no one of the big teams don't want to risk it with him. I do think there is a big difference between Piquet, Senna and their "games" and Alonso. They were master in winning certain people within the team for them, like Senna did with the Honda people and having some political warfare with their ambitious teammates (like Prost, Mansell or Hakkinen). When they had a "following" teammates like Berger, Patrese there were no problems. They all wanted or demanded total dedication to their car and goal. Schumacher was the same, demanding and getting complete focus.
Alonso is a bit different. He wants and gets that complete focus. A following, slightly less fast, teammate like Massa or Raikkonen but still, he manages to start to poke within the team. Almost like he doesn't trust them or attacks publicly partners and/or the team (like he did with Honda).
Senna didn't put McLaren into chaos, he brought Prost into chaos... same goes for Piquet and Williams/Mansell. They were a dream to work for/with. Alonso is maybe more like Prost. Almost like his team is his first enemy...