What Ferrari needs is a German driver Don...donskar wrote: ...
I can't help but remember, though, that Ferrari (which from some earlier posts would seem to be a total disaster) built a car good enough for WDC runner-up just last season.
...
Well said. I think Costa is a good, deeply experienced, thoroughly competent F1 engineer, but he (and the other key members of the current team) could neveer measure up to the impossibly high standards of the "Dream Team." Alonso might be close to Schu, but who is in the same league with Brawn, Todt, and Byrne? Marmorini is not the equal of Gilles Simon, and no one replaced (or probably could replace) Paolo Martinelli. Ferrari fan or not, all of us have lived through a perios dominated by possibly the greatest total team in F1 history.bot6 wrote:Well, I think Costa is paying for somebody else's mistakes. If I was him, I would apply for the Williams job. He's a deserving bloke in a difficult situation, and I think the real culprit for the loss in performance is more to be found on the management side. Domenicalli to be precise. He needs to go. He does not seem to give any strong leadership to the team, and that leads to small-pond despots trying to take over that role, which kills productivity.
Hopefully, he will tell Ferrari to sod off with their "relocation" and go somewhere else, where his expertise and experience will be valued.
Well, I think that the "dream team" did to F1 what Senna and Prost did in his days — they raised the bar, and now everyone is much closer to that level.donskar wrote:Well said. I think Costa is a good, deeply experienced, thoroughly competent F1 engineer, but he (and the other key members of the current team) could neveer measure up to the impossibly high standards of the "Dream Team." Alonso might be close to Schu, but who is in the same league with Brawn, Todt, and Byrne? Marmorini is not the equal of Gilles Simon, and no one replaced (or probably could replace) Paolo Martinelli. Ferrari fan or not, all of us have lived through a perios dominated by possibly the greatest total team in F1 history.bot6 wrote:Well, I think Costa is paying for somebody else's mistakes. If I was him, I would apply for the Williams job. He's a deserving bloke in a difficult situation, and I think the real culprit for the loss in performance is more to be found on the management side. Domenicalli to be precise. He needs to go. He does not seem to give any strong leadership to the team, and that leads to small-pond despots trying to take over that role, which kills productivity.
Hopefully, he will tell Ferrari to sod off with their "relocation" and go somewhere else, where his expertise and experience will be valued.
-After quali, Ana, a media coordinator of Santander is organizing a photo shoot with two models of all red with the logo of the bank dressed.Toujours aussi peu diplomatique, Il Grillo Rampante (commentaire anonyme sur le site de Ferrari, sur les rumeurs la concernant). A réagit sur l’affaire Emilio Botin – Stefano Domenicali (voir ici pour souvenir) indiquant que « Malheureusement pour le journaliste en question, qui, entre autres choses, n’était non seulement pas au Circuit de Catalunya, mais sur très peu de pistes, ses affirmations sont non seulement fausses, mais l’histoire est complètement hors du contexte dans lequel elle a été dit. »
Alors que c’est t’il passé véritablement ? Nous pouvons vous le dire :
Nous sommes après la qualification du Grand Prix d’Espagne. Ana, une des coordinatrice média de Santander organise une séance photo avec deux mannequins toutes de rouge avec logo de la banque vêtue. Ron Dennis arrive et plaisante avec la coordinatrice, puis Emilio Botin , PDG de Santander demande ce qu’il se passe en voyant l’ex patron de McLaren et engage une très courte conversation avec ce dernier.
Ron Dennis en profite pour demander à Botin un rendez vous en fin d’après midi à Monaco, avec la coordinatrice média. Mais, Le PDG de Santander lui répond que cela n’est pas possible car il a déjà un rendez-vous avec Alonso et le personnel de Ferrari. A partir de ce moment, Dennis lui répond que McLaren est devant Ferrari au championnat et que Santander et son PDG devraient tenir ses engagements. Tout cela devant quelques personnes.
Humiliation de Botin qui, de colère, est venu se réfugier dans le motor-home Ferrari et a expliqué l’histoire à un Stefano Domenicali, médusé et mal à l’aise.
Effectivement hors contexte et le malaise n’est pas entre Santander et Ferrari et entre Santander et McLaren…
http://www.tomorrownewsf1.com/paddock-s ... cali-21461
We can judge how Domenicali responds to changes in F1, and to deficiencies on the car. There he has failed considerably. They implemented an extra week of testing at the end of the 2009 season to make the tyres work better and look where we are today: the car stinks on hard compounds and has trouble with all in qualifying. He failed. He shut development early in 2009 to work on 2010 challenger and while it was better, it certainly wasnt on the level of Red Bull, and only got on pace once they copied all the stuff Newey bolted on the Red Bull car. This year is the same with regards to the exhaust solution. For a team that was once so trend setting under the dream team, this is unacceptable.timbo wrote:Well, I think that the "dream team" did to F1 what Senna and Prost did in his days — they raised the bar, and now everyone is much closer to that level.donskar wrote:Well said. I think Costa is a good, deeply experienced, thoroughly competent F1 engineer, but he (and the other key members of the current team) could neveer measure up to the impossibly high standards of the "Dream Team." Alonso might be close to Schu, but who is in the same league with Brawn, Todt, and Byrne? Marmorini is not the equal of Gilles Simon, and no one replaced (or probably could replace) Paolo Martinelli. Ferrari fan or not, all of us have lived through a perios dominated by possibly the greatest total team in F1 history.bot6 wrote:Well, I think Costa is paying for somebody else's mistakes. If I was him, I would apply for the Williams job. He's a deserving bloke in a difficult situation, and I think the real culprit for the loss in performance is more to be found on the management side. Domenicalli to be precise. He needs to go. He does not seem to give any strong leadership to the team, and that leads to small-pond despots trying to take over that role, which kills productivity.
Hopefully, he will tell Ferrari to sod off with their "relocation" and go somewhere else, where his expertise and experience will be valued.
So, I think if the current Ferrari structure worked in that days they would do well.
I fail to see how someone can judge how Domenicalli fairs as a boss, unless you are working with the team. The public image may be quite different.
And telling that it was obvious that the operation was wrong for a long time is IMO a hindsight knowledge.
Where was WhiteBlue when Ferrari did very well in the tests and everybody said they are equal or second to RBR?
Similarly, when it seemed that Macca created a dog of the car there was a talks that are wrong in their personal management, and they are wrong in this and that and where are the people who was speaking now?
Sure, the team seems on the downbeat of the history. But I would rather trust Alonso, who seems to think the team is in good enough shape to commit for next 5 years, I sincerely doubt he is romantic as Jean Alesi.
I fail to see how all of this is Domenicali's fault.Jimi_Hendrix_1967 wrote:We can judge how Domenicali responds to changes in F1, and to deficiencies on the car. There he has failed considerably. They implemented an extra week of testing at the end of the 2009 season to make the tyres work better and look where we are today: the car stinks on hard compounds and has trouble with all in qualifying. He failed. He shut development early in 2009 to work on 2010 challenger and while it was better, it certainly wasnt on the level of Red Bull, and only got on pace once they copied all the stuff Newey bolted on the Red Bull car. This year is the same with regards to the exhaust solution. For a team that was once so trend setting under the dream team, this is unacceptable.
With $400 mil to develop a car, a simultaneous operation in three wind tunnels, three or four prototype configs being tested etc etcJimi_Hendrix_1967 wrote:Brawn seemed to have managed quite well in 2009.
Ferrari did quite well last year strategywise. The Abu-Dhabi slump took a lot of attention but it was in part to Ferrari not getting enough performance from the tyres and the track characteristic, had it been the race without a title at stakes it would be already forgotten.The buck has to stop somewhere. The reorganisations within Ferrari are Domenicali's responsibility. The shuffling of race strategy guys too. He did it twice, and failed twice and is hard underway failing three times, if you look at this years race strategies. Unacceptable.
That was sum that went in the car only.Jimi_Hendrix_1967 wrote:400 mil is around Ferraris annual budget too.
3 or 4 was different general car layouts. Not details. Like they had a BGP001,002,003 etc all in one year to try the best.And it wasnt 3 or 4, but more than a hundred different front wings they put in windtunnels.
Because they fought for both titles and developed the car until the final race.How come Ferrari didnt do the same in 2009?
I didn't say perfect. And the result of German GP was really good for their title fight.ANd you seriously think 2010 was good strategic wise? Id say at Melbourne, Malaysia and oh, Hockenheim they made themselves look like fools. Clumsy. Amateuristic.
So, you would change a team leader during the season and basically start from scratch?No, im less than impressed with how Domenicali steers his team, or his reactions to crisis. ANd seems im not alone.