Yeah, and well done to Michael for raising the bar so high. Unfortunately for him, Lewis is about to raise it further.
Yeah, and well done to Michael for raising the bar so high. Unfortunately for him, Lewis is about to raise it further.
You mean the number of wins and titles, driving dominant cars? Yes. I agree. How often does a driver get to drive cars that are miles ahead of the competition. Hats off to Mercedes!NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:42Yeah, and well done to Michael for raising the bar so high. Unfortunately for him, Lewis is about to raise it further.
I didn't mean anything, but If it makes you feel happy, then so be it.NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:48Mercedes and Lewis you mean. without Lewis, 17 & 18 may have slipped through their finger tips. Hats off to Mercedes AND Lewis Hamilton.
Oh no, I'm more than happy. I am a Mercedes & Lewis fan. I can't be any happier. Please don't worry about me.Moore77 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:52I didn't mean anything, but If it makes you feel happy, then so be it.NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:48Mercedes and Lewis you mean. without Lewis, 17 & 18 may have slipped through their finger tips. Hats off to Mercedes AND Lewis Hamilton.
Exactly as with Schumacher. Hats off to Ferrari for building dominant cars.Moore77 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:46You mean the number of wins and titles, driving dominant cars? Yes. I agree. How often does a driver get to drive cars that are miles ahead of the competition. Hats off to Mercedes!NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:42Yeah, and well done to Michael for raising the bar so high. Unfortunately for him, Lewis is about to raise it further.
Absolutely. But certainly can amass wins and titles in dominant cars with toothless team mates. It's entirely another art to build strong teams ground up and then win titles.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:24Exactly as with Schumacher. Hats off to Ferrari for building dominant cars.Moore77 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:46You mean the number of wins and titles, driving dominant cars? Yes. I agree. How often does a driver get to drive cars that are miles ahead of the competition. Hats off to Mercedes!NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 08:42
Yeah, and well done to Michael for raising the bar so high. Unfortunately for him, Lewis is about to raise it further.
Of course, if Schumacher didn't need a dominant car then he'd have won titles in '97, '98 and '99 too. Oh, and 2005 and 2006.
The fact is that no one wins titles in bad cars. They're either the best or, occasionally, second best car on the grid.
Ummm, accusing Hamilton of having toothless team mates is cute when Schumacher had contractually number 2 team mates.Moore77 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:31Absolutely. But certainly can amass wins and titles in dominant cars with toothless team mates. It's entirely another art to build strong teams ground up and then win titles.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:24Exactly as with Schumacher. Hats off to Ferrari for building dominant cars.
Of course, if Schumacher didn't need a dominant car then he'd have won titles in '97, '98 and '99 too. Oh, and 2005 and 2006.
The fact is that no one wins titles in bad cars. They're either the best or, occasionally, second best car on the grid.
All hail to Jean Todt and his bottomless bag of PMI money? (As Dennis did for them from 84-91)Moore77 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:31Absolutely. But certainly can amass wins and titles in dominant cars with toothless team mates. It's entirely another art to build strong teams ground up and then win titles.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:24Exactly as with Schumacher. Hats off to Ferrari for building dominant cars.
Of course, if Schumacher didn't need a dominant car then he'd have won titles in '97, '98 and '99 too. Oh, and 2005 and 2006.
The fact is that no one wins titles in bad cars. They're either the best or, occasionally, second best car on the grid.
Jean Todt himself was about to be fired in 1996 and got rescued by Schumacher. It's his own admission and I posted that link a couple of pages back. As for money, Mercedes is constantly being accused of the same! Allegedly, they spent billions and billions to build the engines and the cars with unprecedented resources! We all agree that, without money, you can't achieve and sustain success. Then there were Toyotas and Hondas of 2000s who spent millions and millions, but couldn't achieve success. While money is absolutely necessary, but doesn't guarantee success.Jolle wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 10:01All hail to Jean Todt and his bottomless bag of PMI money? (As Dennis did for them from 84-91)Moore77 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:31Absolutely. But certainly can amass wins and titles in dominant cars with toothless team mates. It's entirely another art to build strong teams ground up and then win titles.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:24
Exactly as with Schumacher. Hats off to Ferrari for building dominant cars.
Of course, if Schumacher didn't need a dominant car then he'd have won titles in '97, '98 and '99 too. Oh, and 2005 and 2006.
The fact is that no one wins titles in bad cars. They're either the best or, occasionally, second best car on the grid.
You didn't seem to read the post that I had put a few pages back where Brawn denounced Schumacher's team mates being No.2. The most official authority to do so. How would anyone else not part of the decision making at Ferrari would ever know? People outside of Ferrari have been constantly peddling that lie that, Schumacher had contracted No.2. It's good lie which helped people argue against his success.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:46Ummm, accusing Hamilton of having toothless team mates is cute when Schumacher had contractually number 2 team mates.Moore77 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:31Absolutely. But certainly can amass wins and titles in dominant cars with toothless team mates. It's entirely another art to build strong teams ground up and then win titles.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 09:24
Exactly as with Schumacher. Hats off to Ferrari for building dominant cars.
Of course, if Schumacher didn't need a dominant car then he'd have won titles in '97, '98 and '99 too. Oh, and 2005 and 2006.
The fact is that no one wins titles in bad cars. They're either the best or, occasionally, second best car on the grid.
You are free to peddle that lie. But you have to agree that Bottas has been the best "wingman" there ever has been, helping Hamilton win 4 titles.What about the role of Michael’s team-mates at Ferrari – Eddie Irvine, Rubens Barrichello, Felipe Massa – and controversial races like the 2002 Austrian GP, when Barrichello reluctantly obeyed an order to move aside and allow Schumacher to win?
“The only contractual advantage Michael ever had over his team-mate was that he had first call on the spare car, and because of rule changes the spare car has not been an issue in recent years. But we would always take a decision in a race that we felt was best for Ferrari. Those decisions tended to favour Michael, because he was in the best position to win the championship – but it was never a case of Michael is the No 1 driver, so he has to get this or that.
“We had some difficult times with Rubens, who gave Michael quite a hard time competitively during his six seasons with us. If Rubens had been 20 points ahead of Michael in the championship, it would have been logical for all the strategy decisions to favour him. But it never occurred.
“That race in Austria caused a furore. But you have to remember that at that stage in the championship Michael had 44 points to Rubens’ six points, and of course we wanted to maximise Michael’s chances of the title. Championships have been lost in the past by a single point. We asked Rubens several laps before the end to concede position, but he wouldn’t until the last few hundred metres. These things are all discussed beforehand in the calm of the motorhome, so Rubens knew the score.
“But he’s a passionate guy, he was leading the race, and I can understand how he felt. Three races later (by which time Schumacher’s championship was almost, but not quite, clinched) we let Rubens lead Michael home in Germany.”
Barichello gave some useful insights in to the dynamic within the team. For example, they'd have a team meeting and then the team would have a separate special meeting with Michael that Barichello never got and was never invited to. So he invited himself to one.
To think that Michael never had any special advantages from the team is a laugh."So many times I grabbed my chair because the meeting was already finished and then they started another meeting with just Michael there and I said, hmm this is funny.
"I took my chair and I just would sit there, say nothing and just stay there."
This is clutching on to straws. Taking what Barrichello said, without any context to it.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 11:37Barichello gave some useful insights in to the dynamic within the team. For example, they'd have a team meeting and then the team would have a separate special meeting with Michael that Barichello never got and was never invited to. So he invited himself to one.
To think that Michael never had any special advantages from the team is a laugh."So many times I grabbed my chair because the meeting was already finished and then they started another meeting with just Michael there and I said, hmm this is funny.
"I took my chair and I just would sit there, say nothing and just stay there."
You can easily relate what Barrichello said to what Bottas said on radio of late in Spa when his engineer informed him of an agreement of not using higher power mode, Bottas said, "never heard that before". One can say, Bottas is probably not being invited to some of those meetings!Carlos Sainz was interviewed by Radio Marca. He said, “I have not signed anything that says I’m the second pilot. In my contract, it says, as in all those I have signed, that the team is above the pilot, but does not put anything about second place or supporting anyone.”
There are much better uses of your time than engaging.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Sep 2020, 11:37Barichello gave some useful insights in to the dynamic within the team. For example, they'd have a team meeting and then the team would have a separate special meeting with Michael that Barichello never got and was never invited to. So he invited himself to one.
To think that Michael never had any special advantages from the team is a laugh."So many times I grabbed my chair because the meeting was already finished and then they started another meeting with just Michael there and I said, hmm this is funny.
"I took my chair and I just would sit there, say nothing and just stay there."