lh13 wrote: ↑29 Dec 2020, 12:48
NathanOlder wrote: ↑29 Dec 2020, 12:41
Moore77 wrote: ↑29 Dec 2020, 12:36
I can go over distinguishing every season of Michael, but another time.
Like I always mention, the one important characteristic that puts Michael way on top of any driver, is his ability to build his own success, unlike Hamilton who just drove cars build by others who played critical role in putting that team together.
But how can you say he built his success in a way no one else has ever done ? The way you speak of Michael would suggest that Michael was designing the car himself and hiring the staff. Jean Todt hired Michael, not the other way round.
Testing day in day out at Ferrari's private track, putting hours and hours of 'extra' work, helping the team in any way he could to achieve what they did, I think that's what Moore77 meant.
With today's technology, drivers don't have to do that much, which shows it was harder back then for the driver than it is now.
The private test facilities, the bespoke tyres from Bridgestone (one of the reasons they did so much testing of course), etc., all played a part in their dominant period. They were able to do things that the others just couldn't.
Today, the teams have simulators instead and that testing advantage has gone. So the drivers drive the simulator instead.
The idea that less work is done by the likes of Hamilton is put in perspective by Shovlin:
Shovlin said that Hamilton’s work ethic is an underrated quality and that he has not stopped developing as a driver.
“I think a lot of perhaps his rivals like to think of him as just this person who is fast in the car, but doesn’t put the hours in,” said Shovlin. “He’s one of the hardest-working drivers we’ve ever known.
“The more he can understand about the tyres, about how the car works, about how to use all the available tools, he’s just able to take that and build it into his driving.
“And it’s this relentless way that he looks at every missed opportunity as something that needs fixing before the next race, he goes off and works with Bono [race engineer Peter Bonnington] and Marcus [Dudley, performance engineer], his engineering crew and with the wider team trying to understand any issues.
“It’s just the way he’s constantly building his skill set. And so long into a career, you kind of think drivers will sort of top out this skill set.
“But Lewis keeps finding new and different things to do and how to get the most out of it.”
Also, there are two similarities between Schumacher and Hamilton:
“Michael also had an ability to drive whatever balance was quickest, if it was an understeering car that he needed he’d do it. If he needed to move the work onto the front tyres, he could.
“So, he was very, very adaptable, in his driving style. And those are ostbensibly two characteristics that Lewis very much has.
“A lot of good drivers don’t have a particular style, it’s just whatever’s quick they’ll adapt to do it.”
Shovlin said that Schumacher and Hamilton also had immense mental capacity.
“Michael, it doesn’t matter how many things you told him to do on a lap,” said Shovlin.
“Whether it was moving the brake bias, where to look after tyres, what he needed to do to get them in the right window, he’d be able to sort of put them all together.
“And again, Lewis does it quite quietly often, but you can just keep layering one thing on top of another and he doesn’t forget it. He just does it. And then if you give him more things to do, he adds those on top.
“I think just in terms of the way they are in the car, they’re actually more similar than you might believe. It’s just that out of the car they are two quite different people
Shovlin, unlike anyone on this forum, has worked with both Schumacher and Hamilton. So he's possibly worth listening to.
As an aside, the comment about good drivers being adaptable is interesting in the current era. Max obviously has that ability. Charles has it. Seb appears to have lost some of it. Bottas, like Button, doesn't seem so adaptable. It's all fractions, of course, and they're all driving gods next to the rest of us, but fractions is what F1 works in.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.