alexx_88 wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 06:06
It's obvious teams didn't find hi mas toxic as you do, since both red bull wanted to sign him twice and ferrari was offering him a new deal in 2014.
I can't find any evidence to suggest RedBull wanted to sign Alonso twice. Evidently, they had talks in 2008 - which was just reconfirmed again by Helmut Marko. In that same interview (
AMuS), he also implies that Alonso has a history of driving for teams that effectively treated him a bit like a one-man-show and that that doesn't really fit with how they run things at RB.
There's also a
good piece on Alonso and his frustrations at Ferrari during the 2014 season. Some quotes:
"Frustration at the competitive limitations he was experiencing at one point led Fernando to stipulate that he wanted a veto over technical recruitments, a point confirmed by a source inside Ferrari in 2014. But probably of more significance in this case was the atmosphere the driver’s frustration was lending to the team, regardless of how hard he was working."
"I had the feeling that Fernando had got it into his mind that he could never win with Ferrari,” said Montezemolo, “and that if he was in a Mercedes he could win with one hand and this was very demotivating for everyone. Let me be clear: I believe Alonso is probably the best driver in the world even today – certainly on a Sunday. Maybe not in qualifying, where I think Hamilton and Vettel are maybe faster over one lap, but in the race he is unbelievable – a machine. But we needed motivation and it made me think what we needed for the future."
Indications that things weren't smooth range back to 2013 too,
when there was quite a public spat between Montezemolo and their lead driver;
"In over 20 years at the helm, he has never publicly criticised a driver like he has done with Alonso. If this is the public side of the outburst, one can only imagine what was said privately. Ferrari has been around for decades and has had many great champions pass through its doors. Alonso has been given leeway to criticise the team in the past four years, something Michael Schumacher never did, but clearly Montezemolo has decided that enough is enough. No driver is more important than the team.
That was a reference to the latest comments from Fernando Alonso, which did not go down well with Montezemolo, nor with anyone in the team. So, when Montezemolo called the Spaniard this morning to wish him a happy birthday, he also tweaked his ear, reminding him that, “all the great champions who have driven for Ferrari have always been asked to put the interests of the team above their own. This is the moment to stay calm, avoid polemics and show humility and determination in making one’s own contribution, standing alongside the team and its people both at the track and outside it.”
So, things weren't smooth sailing at all and throughout the history of his career, you will find that these stories have followed him through most teams. Frustrations at McLaren in 2007, frustrations at Ferrari from 2013 to 2014 and frustrations at Honda between 2015 and 2017. Clearly, Alonso is not a low maintenance driver, not by any stretch. Christian Horner was very blunt when he stated just recently on why RB would not consider Alonso for a RedBull drive, talking about 'his pattern of causing chaos at many of his previous teams'.
As I said numerous times, and I'm really not bashing him (afterall, I didn't make up these quotes and articles), he may be one of the strongest drivers of this generation, but clearly there are concerns about what he brings to teams that ultimately limited his appeal with the teams who did have a championship winning car.
alexx_88 wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 06:06
He made some seriously bad timed moves, but, in retrospect could you blame him? Nobody in their right mind would've chosen an energy company when they have a Ferrari contract next to it. And nobody would've known that Marchionne will decide to step in, reorganise Ferrari and increase its budget to the level that was needed to compete.
You make it sound as if they were all down to Alonso's decision. Evidently, there are heaps of subtle points that this wasn't the case. McLaren in 2007 is self explanatory. After the black mail and going to war with your own team, the relationship was unworkable, hence it was dissolved and discontinued by mutual consent by season end. Ferrari wasn't smooth sailing either - while there was some chance Alonso could stay at the team beyond 2014, Ferrari went ahead and pursued Vettel. And IMO for the best too. At the time and in 2015, I made a post that I felt that Ferrari had done the right thing by investing into Vettel. After all the frustrations the years before with Alonso, the team made big structural changes that gave them new motivation and fresh air. If Alonso had stayed, I'm doubtful Ferrari would be in the strong position they are today. They needed the change just as much Alonso did.
So again, and I feel this must be said - I really admire Alonso for the speed and performance he brings. But I find it hard to feel sorry for him, largely because he ended where he did through his own doing. I feel more 'sorry' for drivers like Hulkenberg who IMO have been overlooked and never even got the chances other drivers did.