You haven't been looking very hard then!
You haven't been looking very hard then!
You don't stare too hard at shallow waters.
If the water is shallow then why are you here?
“I’ve never, ever, ever asked for a number one clause,” Hamilton told Sky Sports News HQ. “Sebastian will have that. Fernando always asks for that. I have never, ever asked for that.
“I want to beat the guy, at his best, next to me and then I’ll know where I stand. It’s never been a case of wanting to tie someone’s hands behind their back and beat them and be happy with it. I know a lot of people here would be happy with that, but that’s not me.”
That's a simple fact. While he took the defacto No.1 by his sheer performance and put the team in a position to operate his team mate in No.2 capacity, Ferrari simply did not have to go through that exercise to give the No.1 status as they didn't feel it necessary to create some kind of a reputation of equal opportunity employer for their drivers. On many occasions, Hamilton has moaned that, it is good to fight with other teams than his own team members. It's also a fact that, Mercedes did not hire Ricciardo, who definitely is a better driver than Bottas. That shows, they are happy with what Bottas is doing, despite not being labelled No.2, but a wing man (credit to Toto).e30ernest wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 01:58I think I understand where Moore77 is coming from, though I may not agree with him. His idea here is that while Hamilton does not have a contractual clause to have a number 2 driver, the fact that Mercedes has kept Bottas in its lineup suggests that perhaps it is deliberately getting drivers that are just good enough to be within reach of Hamilton, but not actually good enough to usurp him.
Some Hamilton fans are so much engrossed in proving that his success is greater than of Schumacher's, they are failing to understand what is being argued here. For them, it's just about Schumacher had a No. 2 designate and Hamilton did not and hence, his success is greater. So deeply buried in that one dimensional thinking, every argument with a slightly different flair, is drawn into that muddy pit and try to beat that argument there. It's so hard for them to not be objective on any other aspect of comparison. For that, they try to play up his team mates, despite them being so poor in skill and in performance.e30ernest wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 01:58Of those teammates though, even the likes of Kovalainen held a lot of promise when he was being hired as Hamilton's teammate. Rosberg was also a very highly rated driver. The thing is, Hamilton simply turned out to be better than them over a season. Rosberg and especially Bottas have shown that they can qualify on top of Hamilton, or even win races off him, but I think Hamilton just beats them over the season through his own merit. And maybe the simple skill gulf is where that idea of Mercedes maintaining a number 2 driver comes from.
You joking or something. Your first sentence...... "Unless they were both team mates, then its all guesswork"Wass85 wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 08:06Unless they were both teammates then it's all guesswork.
In my honest opinion Schumacher at his peak was too fast and relentless for Hamilton.
He would hold a decent qualifying advantage over a season and control the races from there. Of course Hamilton would have the odd standout race and beat Schumacher but over a season he just isn't consistent enough.
Outright speed matters and the German was just plain faster in qualifying and race trim.
Put a prime Schumacher in that Merc and he would have won every title there was to win.
Although obviously age matters it was probably more the fact that he hadn't been in a F1 car for 3 years that hurt him most, if not then how do you explain Schumacher being closer to Rosberg in 2012 in their 3 seasons partnered together? If it was just a case of age then Schumacher would be performing the worst in that last year.NathanOlder wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 08:54You joking or something. Your first sentence...... "Unless they were both team mates, then its all guesswork"Wass85 wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 08:06Unless they were both teammates then it's all guesswork.
In my honest opinion Schumacher at his peak was too fast and relentless for Hamilton.
He would hold a decent qualifying advantage over a season and control the races from there. Of course Hamilton would have the odd standout race and beat Schumacher but over a season he just isn't consistent enough.
Outright speed matters and the German was just plain faster in qualifying and race trim.
Put a prime Schumacher in that Merc and he would have won every title there was to win.
You then go to say Schumacher WAS faster in race and qualy but I don't recall them ever being team mates
The only measurement we have on this whole debate is Nico Rosberg.
Lewis > Nico > Michael
all head to head in the same car, they were all team mates, so we have an answer.
Before you say anything about Michael being old ect, its on him. He chose to come back, he chose to put his record at risk, he lost to Nico who lost to Lewis. The same will probably happen to Lewis. If Russell comes in, beats him in head to head during their time together, and then goes on to beat all of Lewis records, that in my book makes him better than Lewis. Especially if he does it clean and without his team mate having his hands tied behind his back.
No it's not. Ricciardo and Bottas haven't raced together in F1, so your "fact" is nothing more than a hypothesis.Moore77 wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 06:28That's a simple fact. While he took the defacto No.1 by his sheer performance and put the team in a position to operate his team mate in No.2 capacity, Ferrari simply did not have to go through that exercise to give the No.1 status as they didn't feel it necessary to create some kind of a reputation of equal opportunity employer for their drivers. On many occasions, Hamilton has moaned that, it is good to fight with other teams than his own team members. It's also a fact that, Mercedes did not hire Ricciardo, who definitely is a better driver than Bottas. That shows, they are happy with what Bottas is doing, despite not being labelled No.2, but a wing man (credit to Toto).e30ernest wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 01:58I think I understand where Moore77 is coming from, though I may not agree with him. His idea here is that while Hamilton does not have a contractual clause to have a number 2 driver, the fact that Mercedes has kept Bottas in its lineup suggests that perhaps it is deliberately getting drivers that are just good enough to be within reach of Hamilton, but not actually good enough to usurp him.
If Bottas is as close as he is to Hamilton, why would he be miles away from Schumacher ? One of Bottas' strengths is his qualy pace. But rather than saying Bottas is fast in qualy, you want it to be Hamilton is slow in qualyWass85 wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 09:05Although obviously age matters it was probably more the fact that he hadn't been in a F1 car for 3 years that hurt him most, if not then how do you explain Schumacher being closer to Rosberg in 2012 in their 3 seasons partnered together? If it was just a case of age then Schumacher would be performing the worst in that last year.NathanOlder wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 08:54You joking or something. Your first sentence...... "Unless they were both team mates, then its all guesswork"Wass85 wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 08:06Unless they were both teammates then it's all guesswork.
In my honest opinion Schumacher at his peak was too fast and relentless for Hamilton.
He would hold a decent qualifying advantage over a season and control the races from there. Of course Hamilton would have the odd standout race and beat Schumacher but over a season he just isn't consistent enough.
Outright speed matters and the German was just plain faster in qualifying and race trim.
Put a prime Schumacher in that Merc and he would have won every title there was to win.
You then go to say Schumacher WAS faster in race and qualy but I don't recall them ever being team mates
The only measurement we have on this whole debate is Nico Rosberg.
Lewis > Nico > Michael
all head to head in the same car, they were all team mates, so we have an answer.
Before you say anything about Michael being old ect, its on him. He chose to come back, he chose to put his record at risk, he lost to Nico who lost to Lewis. The same will probably happen to Lewis. If Russell comes in, beats him in head to head during their time together, and then goes on to beat all of Lewis records, that in my book makes him better than Lewis. Especially if he does it clean and without his team mate having his hands tied behind his back.
Of course it's all guesswork but you just have to step back and think for a second, you honestly think Bottas would be that close to a prime Schumacher in qualifying to what he is to Hamilton now?
I would definitely answer that question, if you can please clear me, with what authority are you asking that question?