This is truly an exceptional post. Being a fan should not preclude someone from being objective. Unfortunately there's often more passion than objectivity when it come to both Vettel and Ferrari. BTW the bolded part is the most concise description I've ever read about the McLaren falling out and their subsequent implosion.dtro wrote: ↑15 Jul 2019, 20:39
I've been a fan of Vettel for years, still I can see that his errors in a sense since at least 2017 onward (maybe even earlier tbh) have been mainly on him. Like you mentioned the fiasco in Singapore 2017 taking out Verstappen/Kimi/et al at the start, all those weird moments at any time when he was near another driver almost guaranteed contact and a recovery drive, to say nothing of Hockenheim last year and Canada this year- too many unforced errors.
Don't know why I keep waiting for his form to improve. Yesterday's incident with Verstappen was yet another one of those unforced errors...
Still able to enjoy seeing Verstappen mature/grow as a racer over the last few years, Hamilton finding a home for his dominance (McLaren wasn't for sure), LeClerc coming to grips with/overcoming* Ferrari's politics/form, and so on down the grid.
TL:DR Rose tinted glasses aren't worn by every Ferrari fan when it comes to how the drivers perform.
I've kind of pondered the similarities between Vettel and Hamilton's careers and being inverse to one another in their relative success/dominance. The years at Ferrari for Vettel will either make him a stronger more complete driver, or make him retire never achieving the goal of winning a championship there. Whatever the outcome, I think there won't be a long wait to see how it ends.