I have changed my mind about Alonso's outlap. It isn't the best outlap ever (why should it be?), but Kimi's one is brutal. I've reviewed the inlaps and outlaps of the other drivers and theres one 44.8 and a couple of high 45's but, when combined with kimi's inlap, I'd dare say that no one (and that includes Massa, Kovalainien, Hamilton, Kimi's other stop and the Toyotas) was within 3 seconds of that inlap outlap combination. I would have made the exact computation, but I am too lazy. For a comparison, Alonso's second stop is similar to Kovalainens's second one. Why was Kimi's transponder precisely the broken one?Moanlower wrote: Alonso's in lap 2nd pitstop 1:24.326
out lap 1:47.032
Kimi's in lap 2nd pitstop 1:23.551 = - 0.775 sec
out lap 1:43.921 = - 3.111 sec
He was not Fangio or Senna, but he did better than Zanardi (previous CART champ with Ganassi) Andretti, Da Matta, and probably Bourdais. He did a better job than Ralph in 2002, was a title contester in 2003 season unlike his teammate and scored more than the double of WC points in 2004. OK, he had a bad 2005 with a new team built arround Kimi, the motorcycle/tennis stuff and a couple of bad luck races.andartop wrote:to belatti:
so, you consider Montoya's carrer in F1 succesful???
{...apologising for still discussing montoya in hugary gp thread...}Belatti wrote:andartop wrote:to belatti:
so, you consider Montoya's carrer in F1 succesful???
Yeah, Magnussen also failed at Stewarts first year. In 1998 season he was way down Barrichello till Jos replaced him. Your comment about MS, stock cars and open wheelers make me wonder about Fangio and his preferences for the open wheeled version of the Mercedes W196.timbo wrote:Anyone remember Magnussen's story? He had record in F3 surpassing Senna's. Then he went to the DTM for a year, next year he was given seat at McLaren and failed to perform. I've read that the opinion was that the year he spent in DTM was bad to his ability to control open-wheeler. F1 cars are sharper than anything else, seems like once you loose that skill it is hard to learn back.
Notice that MS obviously doesn't perform in stock cars as good as in open-wheelers.
Well ChampCars are open-wheelers but comparing with F1 they are more like DTM...
OT: I'd say inexperience cost Carlos Sainz in his first participation, while reliability has been an issu in his later participations. This guy is quick.andartop wrote:i think a good driver would still be quite good no matter what he drove, but then it's a huge step from just being good to being a champ. thus rossi was fast on a wrc but i think crashed every time, schumi was fast on a moto gp test but would probably finish around 10th on race, loeb was good in le mans and sainz was very good in paris-dakar but still did not win, etc...
but it takes a really exceptional driver or rarely seen favourable circumstances (ie much better car or much less capable competition) to be a winner everywhere, and that kind of talent is hard to find. tazio nuvolari for example..
That's interesting, but I think time difference is way too big to compare. However, in his interview MS hinted that there is something about SEEING the wheels that makes it easier for him to drive open-wheelers. Maybe that was Fangio's case too.Belatti wrote:Your comment about MS, stock cars and open wheelers make me wonder about Fangio and his preferences for the open wheeled version of the Mercedes W196.