mika vs michael wrote:Ferrari should shift their focus to 2017. It does not matter so much in the end if they finish 2nd or 3rd in the constructors championship. No one is near Mercedes on a steady basis. depending the circuit they are either close or further back but if mercedes does not screw things they can't beat them. 3 years of utter domination...welldone Merc. Ferrari needs to build a strong team in all areas maybe hire more people. it could be great if they could get aldo costa back. and they need a figure like Ross Brawn in charge.
I completely disagree. In a way, if you stop development on all fronts on the 2016 car, it has a direct knock on effect on the 2017 car, specially the power unit. I think Ferrari have enough resources to balance their focus on both projects. At the moment, Vettel is not out of the WDC and you never know in F1. A slight alteration in tyre pressures or just some mid season rule alteration could swing things back in Ferrari's favor. I do believe that on sheer pace, Ferrari are closer than they were in 2015. Again, Mercedes have done an excellent job, no doubt, but look at the series of problems that Hamilton is having on the reliability front! They are no doubt pushing the limits themselves. I think Baku was a atypical circuit, and the gap was exaggerated and circuit specific. Mercedes suddenly did not find 1.5 seconds in two weeks.
On the subject of hiring? Aldo Costa was a scapegoat when he was fired from Ferrari and Ross Brawn recognized that. He came up the ranks during the Ferrari glory years and I don't think he has any desire to return to Maranello. Plus, personally speaking I don't think the power unit is the reason for the gap to Mercedes. Ferrari seems to have a very competitive power unit themselves. I also feel F1 needs to move on. Shelf lives of engineers or great man managers are much more than drivers and they don't suddenly lose it, so while Ross Brawn would be an amazing catch, I just don't see him motivated enough or someone as a long term solution. Their is a lot of younger engineering talent at Maranello and it would be wiser to back them. Also, Arrivabene seems to be one of the better things at Ferrari so I see no reason to make big changes and upset continuity and team culture.
Ferrari have done an excellent job in closing the gap to Mercedes in these three years and as fans we just need to be patient and keep our expectations in check. Ferrari have a good team at the moment and while they might still fail, wholesale changes will only lead to another few years of transition and even then success isn't a guarantee. What Ferrari could do, is probably hire James Key from STR and have him and Allison work on the weaknesses of the current car. Other than that, a better driver alongside Vettel wouldn't harm us. But, that's about it.
"Sebastian there's very, you're a member of a very select few.. Stewart, Lauda, Piquet, Senna, Prost, Schumacher, Fangio.. VETTEL!"