Actually I don't recall the 07 car being great didn't ham and Alonso split the wins to much between themselves both drivers got 4 wins each while Kimi got 6
Actually I don't recall the 07 car being great didn't ham and Alonso split the wins to much between themselves both drivers got 4 wins each while Kimi got 6
It is widely accepted that the 2007 Ferrari was the fastest car that year by a very significant margin. Didn't you get the memo?
These fit closely with my thoughts. Like many drivers he is blisteringly fast when all is perfect with the car, conditions and him, but he hasn't got the talent to drive well in a car that isn't perfect. He also lacks the ability to keep on it, he can't seem to relentlessly pump out good laps. This is why, most of his career he has been given the number two role.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Nov 2017, 23:28Everything thing not perfect hurts Kimi. That is how you can make sense of his performance. He is not adaptable at all, and has the arrogance not to even try learn to drive car far from perfect. And I was a kimi supporter in his McLaren days. After I saw his true colours i had to move on.
Lewis doesn't like using the simulator too because some drivers rely on the feel of the steering wheel and simulator is just a waste of time for them, it's the same reason with Kimi.3jawchuck wrote: ↑08 Nov 2017, 21:50I do also find his attitude lacking, he has said he won't change his style (probably just covering up for his lack of ability to adapt). His aversion to the simulator is probably, not because he thinks he doesn't need it, but because he thinks it will show him for what he really is.
Those reasons are not excuses, he has proven his speed to people in this sport and there are people who know what he is capable of, and these people know more about him than you and me, and they have a truckload of driver telemetry data and know whats good for the team, this is F1 not charity, no matter how great Steve Robertson is if a driver is not performing he will be sacked.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 09:27There's always a reason Raikkonen isn't good enough apart from Raikkonen. Like I have often said, for him to do something special, he needs the sun and it's planets and satellites to align in one straight line. To be simple, he will do something of substance once in a blue moon, something any driver driving in F1 is capable of.
There's one thing that Raikkonen does have that none of the other F1 drivers do- A manager in Steve Robertson who negotiates the best and most lucrative contracts for him, inspite of his poor performances.
He is bad number 2. Every time he had to block the mercs this year he couldn't do it just compare him to Bottas, he is rarely close to his teammate or the mercs to guard his back or make any difference at all, he pretty much lost the constructors title for Ferrari all by himself, he took out his teammate. He is the worst number 2 ever.Silent Storm wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 14:44Those reasons are not excuses, he has proven his speed to people in this sport and there are people who know what he is capable of, and these people know more about him than you and me, and they have a truckload of driver telemetry data and know whats good for the team, this is F1 not charity, no matter how great Steve Robertson is if a driver is not performing he will be sacked.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 09:27There's always a reason Raikkonen isn't good enough apart from Raikkonen. Like I have often said, for him to do something special, he needs the sun and it's planets and satellites to align in one straight line. To be simple, he will do something of substance once in a blue moon, something any driver driving in F1 is capable of.
There's one thing that Raikkonen does have that none of the other F1 drivers do- A manager in Steve Robertson who negotiates the best and most lucrative contracts for him, inspite of his poor performances.
The only reason Kimi is in F1 when he is way out of form and slow is because he will be the natural No 2 driver, and Ferrari likes to focus on 1 driver. If that was not the case then Sergio Marchionne would have ordered to sack him but he did not, whereas the same man was the reason James Allison left the team because 2016 was disappointing, this man doesn't give anyone a second chance and with that attitude towards everything do you think he would have kept keep Kimi from 2015 - 2018 with this level of performance? Logically it doesn't make sense for Raikkonen to be in F1 when he is 38 and not in his prime, It's like Schumacher vs Rosberg, Schumacher in his prime wouldn't get beaten by Rosberg.
To people who are saying he does not adapt, this is what Ross Brawn said
“I was particularly pleased for Kimi because he struggled a little at the beginning to adapt to the new team,
car and particularly the Bridgestone tyre characteristics. What impressed me was that he worked with his engineers, understood the issues, got on top of the situation and, importantly and in the style of Michael, he did it in a quiet way within the
privacy of the team. His performance in the second half of the season was exceptional.” (Speaking after the end of the 2007 season)
I don't understand this ongoing defence of him. Surely part of being a quick driver is the ability to either resolve issues through setup, or drive around them. A driver who is fast within a very narrow sweet spot is not a fast driver, there is likely any number of circumstances/regulations/conditions where any driver on the grid could be quicker than another but what makes a fast driver (in F1 terms) is the ability to do it across many circumstances, regulations & conditions.Silent Storm wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 14:44Those reasons are not excuses, he has proven his speed to people in this sport and there are people who know what he is capable of, and these people know more about him than you and me, and they have a truckload of driver telemetry data and know whats good for the team, this is F1 not charity, no matter how great Steve Robertson is if a driver is not performing he will be sacked.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 09:27There's always a reason Raikkonen isn't good enough apart from Raikkonen. Like I have often said, for him to do something special, he needs the sun and it's planets and satellites to align in one straight line. To be simple, he will do something of substance once in a blue moon, something any driver driving in F1 is capable of.
There's one thing that Raikkonen does have that none of the other F1 drivers do- A manager in Steve Robertson who negotiates the best and most lucrative contracts for him, inspite of his poor performances.
The only reason Kimi is in F1 when he is way out of form and slow is because he will be the natural No 2 driver, and Ferrari likes to focus on 1 driver. If that was not the case then Sergio Marchionne would have ordered to sack him but he did not, whereas the same man was the reason James Allison left the team because 2016 was disappointing, this man doesn't give anyone a second chance and with that attitude towards everything do you think he would have kept keep Kimi from 2015 - 2018 with this level of performance? Logically it doesn't make sense for Raikkonen to be in F1 when he is 38 and not in his prime, It's like Schumacher vs Rosberg, Schumacher in his prime wouldn't get beaten by Rosberg.
To people who are saying he does not adapt, this is what Ross Brawn said
“I was particularly pleased for Kimi because he struggled a little at the beginning to adapt to the new team,
car and particularly the Bridgestone tyre characteristics. What impressed me was that he worked with his engineers, understood the issues, got on top of the situation and, importantly and in the style of Michael, he did it in a quiet way within the
privacy of the team. His performance in the second half of the season was exceptional.” (Speaking after the end of the 2007 season)
The money doesn't bother me, but I am slightly miffed by him taking up a seat which a better driver could take, in turn freeing up space in a lower team for a younger up and coming driver.Ennis wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 18:08... led to him earning a lot more money and enjoying a much longer career with much more established drives than others of equal or greater driving quality have got near to. Which doesn't really bother me, sportsperson pay has always come with an 'appeal' payment alongside the 'talent' payment....
Not really true. They are some tracks* that Lewis does not do the track walk on. But Lewis does go in the simulator a lot. Right from his McLaren days there are many videos of Lewis using the sim. kimi on the other hand would not be caught dead in one!Silent Storm wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 14:16Lewis doesn't like using the simulator too because some drivers rely on the feel of the steering wheel and simulator is just a waste of time for them, it's the same reason with Kimi.3jawchuck wrote: ↑08 Nov 2017, 21:50I do also find his attitude lacking, he has said he won't change his style (probably just covering up for his lack of ability to adapt). His aversion to the simulator is probably, not because he thinks he doesn't need it, but because he thinks it will show him for what he really is.
Erm. Was that after he had like ten steering racks custom tailored to the little twist he does with his wrist 123.5 degrees of turn of the steering wheel, to the right, when the tyre pressure is above 16 psi, but! Below 16.34 psi and the car suspension is within jounce limits of 1.568 mm per second cubed?Silent Storm wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 14:44Those reasons are not excuses, he has proven his speed to people in this sport and there are people who know what he is capable of, and these people know more about him than you and me, and they have a truckload of driver telemetry data and know whats good for the team, this is F1 not charity, no matter how great Steve Robertson is if a driver is not performing he will be sacked.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017, 09:27There's always a reason Raikkonen isn't good enough apart from Raikkonen. Like I have often said, for him to do something special, he needs the sun and it's planets and satellites to align in one straight line. To be simple, he will do something of substance once in a blue moon, something any driver driving in F1 is capable of.
There's one thing that Raikkonen does have that none of the other F1 drivers do- A manager in Steve Robertson who negotiates the best and most lucrative contracts for him, inspite of his poor performances.
The only reason Kimi is in F1 when he is way out of form and slow is because he will be the natural No 2 driver, and Ferrari likes to focus on 1 driver. If that was not the case then Sergio Marchionne would have ordered to sack him but he did not, whereas the same man was the reason James Allison left the team because 2016 was disappointing, this man doesn't give anyone a second chance and with that attitude towards everything do you think he would have kept keep Kimi from 2015 - 2018 with this level of performance? Logically it doesn't make sense for Raikkonen to be in F1 when he is 38 and not in his prime, It's like Schumacher vs Rosberg, Schumacher in his prime wouldn't get beaten by Rosberg.
To people who are saying he does not adapt, this is what Ross Brawn said
“I was particularly pleased for Kimi because he struggled a little at the beginning to adapt to the new team,
car and particularly the Bridgestone tyre characteristics. What impressed me was that he worked with his engineers, understood the issues, got on top of the situation and, importantly and in the style of Michael, he did it in a quiet way within the
privacy of the team. His performance in the second half of the season was exceptional.” (Speaking after the end of the 2007 season)
He is unable to drive around problems as well as A-level F1 drivers, but the flip side is that he is able to precisely identify weaknesses in the car better than anyone else. Kimi is an ideal test/development driver, and that makes him a fantastic partner to a superfast #1 driver like Vettel or Alonso. If he had no value beyond his raw laptimes then Ferrari would obviously never keep him.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Nov 2017, 23:28Everything thing not perfect hurts Kimi. That is how you can make sense of his performance. He is not adaptable at all, and has the arrogance not to even try learn to drive car far from perfect. And I was a kimi supporter in his McLaren days. After I saw his true colours i had to move on.