Once and again. And then again. My god...
I don’t care about age, just about performance, mistakes and all the relevant stuff.
This is his 10th year in F1 and third set of regulations. His car this year is not designed by Newey and his car last year had very little input from Newey, according to Newey himself and leading to him leaving RBR for Aston Martin.wiktor977 wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 13:42Salary that he makes in RB is huge but only because of the titles he won there and the bonuses that come with it. With Max, there are no guarantees that he will be as fast as he is now in a car with different characteristics. I would say that big teams would be willing to pay him $45-55mil max at the moment.peewon wrote: ↑03 Apr 2025, 10:27As someone with first hand knowledge with celebrity sales pitches, that number is just an eye catching potential earnings for Max and not necessarily even that unrealistic without knowing the timeline. If its over 10 years, its not impossible considering his earnings are already in the $80-90m/yr range as per most public information. If AM made a recruitment pitch to Max, this is how they would've presented it to him apart from all the other attractions. It would include everything from salary to endorsements, etc.
Right but some people just want to blame his age. I'm not saying it's true. Just saying that's what people are gonna say. The end of the day, I'll will wait for Alonso to say it.-wkst- wrote: ↑04 Apr 2025, 21:54I don’t care about age, just about performance, mistakes and all the relevant stuff.
Currently I believe that ALO isn’t the one we saw 10 years ago, but I just want to see, following this guy for his whole career, that he gets his (last) drive in a Newey car and some joy.
But I fear that Stroll will exchange ALO if he doesn’t start to deliver. VER is a real threat. One word he wants to switch to AMR and ALO is out…
Maybe it is presbyopia?diffuser wrote: ↑04 Apr 2025, 22:22Right but some people just want to blame his age. I'm not saying it's true. Just saying that's what people are gonna say. The end of the day, I'll will wait for Alonso to say it.-wkst- wrote: ↑04 Apr 2025, 21:54I don’t care about age, just about performance, mistakes and all the relevant stuff.
Currently I believe that ALO isn’t the one we saw 10 years ago, but I just want to see, following this guy for his whole career, that he gets his (last) drive in a Newey car and some joy.
But I fear that Stroll will exchange ALO if he doesn’t start to deliver. VER is a real threat. One word he wants to switch to AMR and ALO is out…
That's incredibly speculative, but I will say I found this recent Youtube video about eyesight and athletes pretty interesting. Nothing conclusive, but it's something that's potentially gone overlooked for a long time.ispano6 wrote: ↑05 Apr 2025, 00:29Maybe it is presbyopia?diffuser wrote: ↑04 Apr 2025, 22:22Right but some people just want to blame his age. I'm not saying it's true. Just saying that's what people are gonna say. The end of the day, I'll will wait for Alonso to say it.-wkst- wrote: ↑04 Apr 2025, 21:54
I don’t care about age, just about performance, mistakes and all the relevant stuff.
Currently I believe that ALO isn’t the one we saw 10 years ago, but I just want to see, following this guy for his whole career, that he gets his (last) drive in a Newey car and some joy.
But I fear that Stroll will exchange ALO if he doesn’t start to deliver. VER is a real threat. One word he wants to switch to AMR and ALO is out…
Presbyopia is unfortunately an unavoidable part of aging. It affects performance athletes just like any normal person and Alonso is at the age of onset (early 40s). Maybe he is having trouble gauging the limit of the track in certain light conditions and doesn't realize that he is over the limit. He didn't sound like he realized that he went into the patch of grass that induced his off. The same could be said of his Australia crash during the race. I wouldn't call it a rookie mistake, and maybe he could get his eyes checked if he hasn't already. He can get contacts, drops or even surgery to help correct it if it's the case.
Apparently, they were saying on F1TV, that based on how you're seated in the car, you can't really see if you're on the grass.ispano6 wrote: ↑05 Apr 2025, 03:38Presbyopia is unfortunately an unavoidable part of aging. It affects performance athletes just like any normal person and Alonso is at the age of onset (early 40s). Maybe he is having trouble gauging the limit of the track in certain light conditions and doesn't realize that he is over the limit. He didn't sound like he realized that he went into the patch of grass that induced his off. The same could be said of his Australia crash during the race. I wouldn't call it a rookie mistake, and maybe he could get his eyes checked if he hasn't already. He can get contacts, drops or even surgery to help correct it if it's the case.