Unpopular F1 opinions

The place for anything and everything else to do with F1 history, different forms of motorsport, and all other randomness
User avatar
UncreativeUsername37
Posts: 3420
Joined: 25 May 2012, 14:36
Location: Earth

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by UncreativeUsername37 »

tBone wrote:About Minardi liveries, here's an unpopular one, I think. The M198 and M199 had the best liveries Minardi has ever had, in my opinion.

I'll support you.
Rob Dylan wrote:Mercedes paying homage to the other W12 chassis by breaking down 30 minutes in
User avatar
Nessafox
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 6249
Joined: 30 Nov 2009, 19:45
Location: Stupid, sexy Flanders.

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Nessafox »

UgncreativeUsergname wrote:
tBone wrote:About Minardi liveries, here's an unpopular one, I think. The M198 and M199 had the best liveries Minardi has ever had, in my opinion.

I'll support you.

I don't think that's unpopular. At least not on GPR. Altough the beauty of these cars isn't so much in the livery, but more in the shape, i think.
I don't know what i want and i want it now!
yannicksamlad
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 644
Joined: 19 May 2014, 11:16

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by yannicksamlad »

This wrote:
UgncreativeUsergname wrote:
tBone wrote:About Minardi liveries, here's an unpopular one, I think. The M198 and M199 had the best liveries Minardi has ever had, in my opinion.

I'll support you.

I don't think that's unpopular. At least not on GPR. Altough the beauty of these cars isn't so much in the livery, but more in the shape, i think.


Mmm..unpopular with me though; the absence of yellow meant they couldn't live up to the heritage, and were just less distinctive. And silver was a bit 'McLaren'.....at least the M198 seemed to have a few more sponsors and by then my preference for Minardi livery was largely influenced by my desire for them to have some decent sponsorship..
I started supporting Emmo in 1976 (3 points )....missed 75, 74, 73, 72...
User avatar
watka
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 4097
Joined: 26 Apr 2009, 19:04
Location: Chessington, the former home of Brabham
Contact:

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by watka »

GerhardTalger wrote:Even Heinz-Harald looked a contender on lap 27 at the Nurburgring... too bad he dropped out. For one unpopular opinion (at least here) I feel more disbelief in HHF losing his championship chances there than Luca losing his 4th place later on in that race.


https://youtu.be/m2kXYfJ72ZE?t=47 :x
Watka - you know, the swimming horses guy
User avatar
UncreativeUsername37
Posts: 3420
Joined: 25 May 2012, 14:36
Location: Earth

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by UncreativeUsername37 »

watka wrote:
GerhardTalger wrote:Even Heinz-Harald looked a contender on lap 27 at the Nurburgring... too bad he dropped out. For one unpopular opinion (at least here) I feel more disbelief in HHF losing his championship chances there than Luca losing his 4th place later on in that race.


https://youtu.be/m2kXYfJ72ZE?t=47 :x

not available in your country lol

I know that ad, so I'm pretty sure I know what part you're referencing, but others won't have seen it.
Rob Dylan wrote:Mercedes paying homage to the other W12 chassis by breaking down 30 minutes in
User avatar
CoopsII
Posts: 4676
Joined: 15 Dec 2011, 09:33
Location: Starkiller Base Debris

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by CoopsII »

GerhardTalger wrote:For one unpopular opinion (at least here) I feel more disbelief in HHF losing his championship chances there than Luca losing his 4th place later on in that race.

Not unpopular, simply boring.
Just For One Day...
User avatar
FullMetalJack
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 6270
Joined: 31 Mar 2009, 15:32
Location: Some place far away. Yes, that'll do.

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by FullMetalJack »

The 2005 qualifying system was just as good as the current knockout one, with the exception of during 2009 of course.

By that, I mean the one used from Nurburgring onwards where order was based on where you finished in the previous race, obviously not the aggregate one.
I like the way Snrub thinks!
User avatar
Francis23
Posts: 98
Joined: 16 Mar 2015, 15:21

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Francis23 »

yannicksamlad wrote:About Minardi liveries, here's an unpopular one, I think. The M198 and M199 had the best liveries Minardi has ever had, in my opinion.

Funnily enough, they were my least favourite Minardi liveries (M198 in particular), but I think that's just me, a far more unpopular opinion would be me admitting that the 1994 Kronenbourg Larrousse livery wasn't bad (*takes cover under his desk where he should be working, but is instead procrastinating on GP Rejects*). :oops:
FullMetalJack wrote:The 2005 qualifying system was just as good as the current knockout one, with the exception of during 2009 of course.

By that, I mean the one used from Nurburgring onwards where order was based on where you finished in the previous race, obviously not the aggregate one.

I would agree with that, and the potential for rain in parts of the session would mix up the grid (although that would divide opinion), IIRC the Minardi's and Jordan's were top in France 03, unfortunately it was only the first qualification session, probably why 05 was better.
User avatar
Nessafox
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 6249
Joined: 30 Nov 2009, 19:45
Location: Stupid, sexy Flanders.

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Nessafox »

Francis23 wrote:
yannicksamlad wrote:About Minardi liveries, here's an unpopular one, I think. The M198 and M199 had the best liveries Minardi has ever had, in my opinion.

Funnily enough, they were my least favourite Minardi liveries (M198 in particular), but I think that's just me, a far more unpopular opinion would be me admitting that the 1994 Kronenbourg Larrousse livery wasn't bad (*takes cover under his desk where he should be working, but is instead procrastinating on GP Rejects*). :oops:

Oh, that Kronenbourg Livery was actually good and fit cleverly into the shape of that car! I guess many people dislike assymetric liveries.
I don't know what i want and i want it now!
User avatar
Francis23
Posts: 98
Joined: 16 Mar 2015, 15:21

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Francis23 »

This wrote:
Francis23 wrote:
yannicksamlad wrote:About Minardi liveries, here's an unpopular one, I think. The M198 and M199 had the best liveries Minardi has ever had, in my opinion.

Funnily enough, they were my least favourite Minardi liveries (M198 in particular), but I think that's just me, a far more unpopular opinion would be me admitting that the 1994 Kronenbourg Larrousse livery wasn't bad (*takes cover under his desk where he should be working, but is instead procrastinating on GP Rejects*). :oops:

Oh, that Kronenbourg Livery was actually good and fit cleverly into the shape of that car! I guess many people dislike assymetric liveries.

Thank god, thought I would have been alone with that one :)
GerhardTalger
Posts: 178
Joined: 25 Apr 2014, 07:50

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by GerhardTalger »

CoopsII wrote:
GerhardTalger wrote:For one unpopular opinion (at least here) I feel more disbelief in HHF losing his championship chances there than Luca losing his 4th place later on in that race.

Not unpopular, simply boring.


Maybe I wouldn't think that way if it wasn't my favourite driver back in the day. Or if he actually contested for a podium, or even a win. For a single Minardi win, I'll gladly trade in all the good progress, podiums and wins by Jordan that year. And more.
User avatar
Bobby Doorknobs
Posts: 4060
Joined: 30 Jul 2014, 17:52
Location: no

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Bobby Doorknobs »

GerhardTalger wrote:
CoopsII wrote:
GerhardTalger wrote:For one unpopular opinion (at least here) I feel more disbelief in HHF losing his championship chances there than Luca losing his 4th place later on in that race.

Not unpopular, simply boring.


Maybe I wouldn't think that way if it wasn't my favourite driver back in the day. Or if he actually contested for a podium, or even a win. For a single Minardi win, I'll gladly trade in all the good progress, podiums and wins by Jordan that year. And more.

The information in this thread suggests a podium could well have been on the cards :cry:
#FreeGonzo
User avatar
Francis23
Posts: 98
Joined: 16 Mar 2015, 15:21

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Francis23 »

GerhardTalger wrote:- 1994 was an unwatchable season overall, worse than the Ferrari domination year of 2004.

I would agree with you, but the review is pretty good, mainly because of this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yw6YkgSJZkU
User avatar
Wallio
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 2634
Joined: 22 Feb 2012, 22:54
Location: The Wyoming Valley, PA

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Wallio »

Simtek wrote:
Biscione wrote:
Francis23 wrote:Here's one for you, I rather liked the BAR 01 and Minardi M02 liveries

While you're on your own with the BAR zip livery...

*nervously sticks hand up as someone who kind of liked it*



Yea add me as another who liked the Zipper, although really tams should be able to run different liveries. I also think the 2007-2008 cars look worlds better than the current lot. Every "bit" stuck on them had one purpose, speed.
Professional Historian/Retired Drag Racer/Whiskey Enthusiast

"He makes the move on the outside, and knowing George as we do, he's probably on the radio right now telling the team how great he is." - James Hinchcliffe on George Russell
User avatar
UncreativeUsername37
Posts: 3420
Joined: 25 May 2012, 14:36
Location: Earth

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by UncreativeUsername37 »

Wallio wrote:Yea add me as another who liked the Zipper, although really tams should be able to run different liveries. I also think the 2007-2008 cars look worlds better than the current lot. Every "bit" stuck on them had one purpose, speed.

Three unpopular opinions in one post without putting them a list! Have we had that before?
Rob Dylan wrote:Mercedes paying homage to the other W12 chassis by breaking down 30 minutes in
User avatar
Wallio
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 2634
Joined: 22 Feb 2012, 22:54
Location: The Wyoming Valley, PA

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Wallio »

Well to be fair, I did quote, and two of them were me agreeing with others


And really different liveries is unpopular? That is a bit surprising to me, but fair enough.
Professional Historian/Retired Drag Racer/Whiskey Enthusiast

"He makes the move on the outside, and knowing George as we do, he's probably on the radio right now telling the team how great he is." - James Hinchcliffe on George Russell
User avatar
UncreativeUsername37
Posts: 3420
Joined: 25 May 2012, 14:36
Location: Earth

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by UncreativeUsername37 »

Wallio wrote:Well to be fair, I did quote, and two of them were me agreeing with others


And really different liveries is unpopular? That is a bit surprising to me, but fair enough.

Only one way to find out, get everyone on the entire forum to vote!
Rob Dylan wrote:Mercedes paying homage to the other W12 chassis by breaking down 30 minutes in
User avatar
Bobby Doorknobs
Posts: 4060
Joined: 30 Jul 2014, 17:52
Location: no

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Bobby Doorknobs »

UgncreativeUsergname wrote:
Wallio wrote:Well to be fair, I did quote, and two of them were me agreeing with others


And really different liveries is unpopular? That is a bit surprising to me, but fair enough.

Only one way to find out, get everyone on the entire forum to vote!

I vote in favour of different liveries. It's not something that I think would become very commonplace on the grid, but the BARs undoubtedly looked better in separate colour-schemes :)
#FreeGonzo
User avatar
Rob Dylan
Posts: 3493
Joined: 18 May 2014, 15:34
Location: Andy Warhol's basement

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Rob Dylan »

Just imagine the confusion at Monaco when all the drivers decide to run with one-off liveries for that race :D
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!
User avatar
Francis23
Posts: 98
Joined: 16 Mar 2015, 15:21

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Francis23 »

Simtek wrote:
UgncreativeUsergname wrote:
Wallio wrote:Well to be fair, I did quote, and two of them were me agreeing with others


And really different liveries is unpopular? That is a bit surprising to me, but fair enough.

Only one way to find out, get everyone on the entire forum to vote!

I vote in favour of different liveries. It's not something that I think would become very commonplace on the grid, but the BARs undoubtedly looked better in separate colour-schemes :)

If only, the 555 livery was gorgeous
Image
I'm just thinking, one of the Red Bull cars could have the 'Red Bull can' livery whilst the other could be purple and have more focus on the 'Infiniti' side of their team. Or better still one can be dark blue (for normal Red Bull) and one could be light blue (for sugar free), oh if only Coca Cola sponsored an F1 team!
User avatar
Warren Hughes
Posts: 1334
Joined: 23 Aug 2009, 10:37
Location: Sunderland, UK

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Warren Hughes »

Unpopular opinion #782:

Sergio Perez is grossly overrated.
Nico Rosberg wrote:Break me down mentally? Good luck with that one.

:roll:
User avatar
Salamander
Posts: 9570
Joined: 29 Mar 2009, 20:59
Location: trapped on some prison island

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Salamander »

Warren Hughes wrote:Unpopular opinion #782:

Sergio Perez is grossly overrated.


I think he was grossly overrated, but over the last couple years the estimation seems to have come down to the level of a decent-but-not-great driver who has the odd moment of brilliance.
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing I wouldn't be in Formula 1.
Everything's great.
I'm not surprised about anything.
User avatar
Rob Dylan
Posts: 3493
Joined: 18 May 2014, 15:34
Location: Andy Warhol's basement

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Rob Dylan »

Salamander wrote:
Warren Hughes wrote:Unpopular opinion #782:

Sergio Perez is grossly overrated.


I think he was grossly overrated, but over the last couple years the estimation seems to have come down to the level of a decent-but-not-great driver who has the odd moment of brilliance.

At the same time though, I think we were robbed of seeing him get a shot in a decent car in 2013. That was supposed to be his proving year and we learned little from it.
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!
User avatar
DanielPT
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 6126
Joined: 30 Dec 2010, 18:44
Location: Porto, Portugal

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by DanielPT »

The McLaren MP4-30 is actually a good car that is currently being let down by its engine.
Colin Kolles on F111, 2011 HRT challenger: The car doesn't look too bad; it looks like a modern F1 car.
User avatar
DemocalypseNow
Posts: 13185
Joined: 17 Aug 2009, 09:30
Location: Lost, send help
Contact:

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by DemocalypseNow »

DanielPT wrote:The McLaren MP4-30 is actually a good car that is currently being let down by its engine.

This isn't an unpopular opinion, merely one that that those that aren't dedicated fans aren't aware to be true. It seems to be a widely held opinion at this point. I see you trying to be controversial, and it isn't working :P
Novitopoli wrote:Everytime someone orders at Pizza Hut, an Italian dies.
Novitopoli wrote:Juve's Triplete: Calciopoli, doping & Mafia connections.

Image Image
User avatar
DanielPT
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 6126
Joined: 30 Dec 2010, 18:44
Location: Porto, Portugal

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by DanielPT »

Biscione wrote:
DanielPT wrote:The McLaren MP4-30 is actually a good car that is currently being let down by its engine.

This isn't an unpopular opinion, merely one that that those that aren't dedicated fans aren't aware to be true. It seems to be a widely held opinion at this point. I see you trying to be controversial, and it isn't working :P


I've seen many times written that this McLaren is a 'crapbox' or 'shitbox' or something like that, that I really felt it was an unpopular opinion. My mistake.
Colin Kolles on F111, 2011 HRT challenger: The car doesn't look too bad; it looks like a modern F1 car.
User avatar
Wallio
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 2634
Joined: 22 Feb 2012, 22:54
Location: The Wyoming Valley, PA

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Wallio »

DanielPT wrote:The McLaren MP4-30 is actually a good car that is currently being let down by its engine.


We have no evidence of that either way though. It won't be until Monaco and Hungary that we will know better. The car could very well be a shitbox

I do find it funny how a popular team (McLaren) are given the benefit of the doubt chassis wise, whereas a hated team (Red Bull) aren't. Sure Newey leaving hurts immensely, but the Renault it can be argued is WORSE than the Honda, since its two years old already, and like with McLaren, we won't know about the chassis until Monaco.
Professional Historian/Retired Drag Racer/Whiskey Enthusiast

"He makes the move on the outside, and knowing George as we do, he's probably on the radio right now telling the team how great he is." - James Hinchcliffe on George Russell
User avatar
pi314159
Posts: 3661
Joined: 11 Aug 2012, 12:12

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by pi314159 »

Wallio wrote:I do find it funny how a popular team (McLaren) are given the benefit of the doubt chassis wise, whereas a hated team (Red Bull) aren't. Sure Newey leaving hurts immensely, but the Renault it can be argued is WORSE than the Honda, since its two years old already, and like with McLaren, we won't know about the chassis until Monaco.

The Renault teams might be worse off than McLaren as Honda probably has more potential to catch up, but at the moment, the Honda is still the worst performing engine. And Red Bull are not given the benefit of doubt because they have their own junior team, Toro Rosso, competing at a similar level. Maybe we're unfair, and Toro Rosso have produced an awesome chassis for this year, but the more likely explanation is that the Red Bull chassis isn't that great.
pasta_maldonado wrote:The stewards have recommended that Alan Jones learns to drive.
User avatar
mario
Posts: 8123
Joined: 31 Oct 2009, 17:13

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by mario »

pi314159 wrote:
Wallio wrote:I do find it funny how a popular team (McLaren) are given the benefit of the doubt chassis wise, whereas a hated team (Red Bull) aren't. Sure Newey leaving hurts immensely, but the Renault it can be argued is WORSE than the Honda, since its two years old already, and like with McLaren, we won't know about the chassis until Monaco.

The Renault teams might be worse off than McLaren as Honda probably has more potential to catch up, but at the moment, the Honda is still the worst performing engine. And Red Bull are not given the benefit of doubt because they have their own junior team, Toro Rosso, competing at a similar level. Maybe we're unfair, and Toro Rosso have produced an awesome chassis for this year, but the more likely explanation is that the Red Bull chassis isn't that great.

I suppose that the assumption comes in part because the MP4/30 is significantly slower through the speed traps than most of the other cars, but manages to make its way back up into the midfield pack. If that is the case, then logically they must be recovering at least some of their deficit in the corners, hence the assumption that the chassis must be reasonably good to compensate for their relatively poor engine.

Equally, there is also the fact that McLaren now have Prodromou driving forward their development - given Prodromou was cited as a key figure given his position as Chief Aerodynamicist at Red Bull, not to mention the fact that he was personally head hunted by Newey for that role, is probably another reason why it is believed that the MP4/30 has a fairly decent chassis.
Martin Brundle, on watching a replay of Grosjean spinning:
"The problem with Grosjean is that he want to take a look back at the corner he's just exited"
User avatar
good_Ralf
Posts: 2681
Joined: 06 Jun 2013, 13:14
Location: Hitchin, UK

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by good_Ralf »

I find Jonathan Legard far less annoying to listen to than Crofty. Maybe Legard's dull voice and style fits my mood at the moment :twisted: .
Check out the position of the sun on 2 August at 20:08 in my garden

Allard Kalff in 1994 wrote:OH!! Schumacher in the wall! Right in front of us, Michael Schumacher is in the wall! He's hit the pitwall, he c... Ah, it's Jos Verstappen.
User avatar
Salamander
Posts: 9570
Joined: 29 Mar 2009, 20:59
Location: trapped on some prison island

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Salamander »

good_Ralf wrote:I find Jonathan Legard far less annoying to listen to than Crofty. Maybe Legard's dull voice and style fits my mood at the moment :twisted: .


At least you could laugh at Legard, and/or play Legard Bingo. Croft just irritates me.
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing I wouldn't be in Formula 1.
Everything's great.
I'm not surprised about anything.
User avatar
Rob Dylan
Posts: 3493
Joined: 18 May 2014, 15:34
Location: Andy Warhol's basement

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Rob Dylan »

In the way that Murray Walker could make most races interesting just by his delivery, Legard was similar in the wrong way :P his super-enthusiastic delivery of the exact same lines week-in week-out was just cringe-worthy but you could distract yourself by the hilarity of his incompetence.

I think the peak (nadir) of Legard's commentating was Korea in 2010, when neither he nor Brundle could get any of the cars right. They would miss overtakes, think Button was Hamilton, get confused as to why everyone was in the wrong position, and manage to throw in the word "problem" and "crucial" about 2,000 times. That race was almost like some kind of attempt at self-parody.
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!
User avatar
Francis23
Posts: 98
Joined: 16 Mar 2015, 15:21

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Francis23 »

Here's one for you, there is a reasonable chance, in my opinion, that the last two races of the 2007 season were fixed.

Everyone knows about 'spygate', well under normal conditions a team would be chucked straight out of the championship, especially as it seems a much worse offence than say, Tyrrell in 84 or BAR in 05. However if the FIA were to ban McLaren for the rest of the season, Ferrari, and Raikkonen, would stroll to the title easily which would not be good for viewing audiences especially since at the time we just came out of the 'Schumi Ferrari era'. So instead they only get rid of constructors points (less prize money) and slap a huge fine on them, which when you think about it is just a 'double fine'; this ensures that TV audiences remain very large, due to both the title fight and Hamilton's potential to make history.

However whichever way you look at it it would be farcical for McLaren to win the WDC with that car, and the outcry would be enormous. So, come China and Hamilton is left out way too late, dangerously late in fact, the tyres were down to the canvas on a track with one of F1's longest straights, which serves as a good excuse for him to slide into the gravel and out of the race (it's worth noting that the 2nd half of Hamilton's season was a lot more inconsistent than the 1st).

Then comes Brazil, now forgive me if I'm wrong but both McLaren and Ferrari had incredible reliability that year right? So why does their only gearbox failure that season happen in the most crucial race and then magically fixes itself? And on a side note why did Alonso finish a minute behind when both Ferrari and McLaren were neck and neck all year? Anyway, Raikkonen wins the championship, and the outcome is the best possible for everyone given the politics that year:
-The non-cheating team won
-We were treated to a brilliant title fight
-People were optimistic for Hamilton the following year
All three saved F1's bacon that year

Oh and that fuel irregularities thing? Inconclusive evidence? Ok then.
User avatar
Dj_bereta
Posts: 1513
Joined: 30 Aug 2009, 15:55

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Dj_bereta »

Alonso will follow Hill and Villeneuve footsteps instead of winning another title.
Waiting for Lotus hiring Johnny Cecotto jr.
User avatar
CoopsII
Posts: 4676
Joined: 15 Dec 2011, 09:33
Location: Starkiller Base Debris

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by CoopsII »

Dj_bereta wrote:Alonso will follow Hill and Villeneuve footsteps instead of winning another title.

That makes no sense. Both Hill and Villeneuve only won the one title whilst Alonso already has two. Hill cashed in with a backmarker team before finishing his career with some respectability in the mid-field while Villeneuve became part of a brand new team before mooching about in a selection of moderately successful teams.

Unless you meant that Alonso wouldn't win another title in which case maybe comparing him to someone like Hakkinen would be more accurate.
Just For One Day...
User avatar
DemocalypseNow
Posts: 13185
Joined: 17 Aug 2009, 09:30
Location: Lost, send help
Contact:

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by DemocalypseNow »

Strategy-wise, Mercedes did as good a job as was possible at Monaco.

I see people accusing them of playing too much of the "theoretical laptop game", if you will. Nonsense. This is how you win races. If your data is telling you that you have a window for a free pitstop, to get some fresh rubber on the car and still return to the front of the pack, why would you ignore that and stay out on old rubber? That's a waste of an advantage. If the data had been correct and Hamilton had stayed out, they would have looked stupid for not locking down the victory and instead leaving it to chance on worn tyres (and we all know how Hamilton eats through his tyres faster than many of his peers).

What else are they supposed to do? Second guess every last bit of information they are fed? Yes, the data was wrong on this occasion, but if you becomes distrustful of everything you can't see with your own eyes, you will start to make terrible strategic decisions. The strategist's job is to interpret all the information they have at their disposal and make the best decision based on the scenario presented to them. They did that.
Novitopoli wrote:Everytime someone orders at Pizza Hut, an Italian dies.
Novitopoli wrote:Juve's Triplete: Calciopoli, doping & Mafia connections.

Image Image
User avatar
DanielPT
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 6126
Joined: 30 Dec 2010, 18:44
Location: Porto, Portugal

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by DanielPT »

Biscione wrote:I see people accusing them of playing too much of the "theoretical laptop game", if you will. Nonsense. This is how you win races. If your data is telling you that you have a window for a free pitstop, to get some fresh rubber on the car and still return to the front of the pack, why would you ignore that and stay out on old rubber? That's a waste of an advantage. If the data had been correct and Hamilton had stayed out, they would have looked stupid for not locking down the victory and instead leaving it to chance on worn tyres (and we all know how Hamilton eats through his tyres faster than many of his peers).


Apparently that pit-stop lasted more as it should and Hamilton also lost more time than expected after catching the safety car. These are formula 1 teams, they are the pinnacle in motorsport terms and should react on the fly to an ever changing environment. Nevertheless, even if the data was okay and no such time was lost, a pit-stop is always a gamble. There is always a chance of a stuck jack, a misfitted tyre, stalling, releasing lights malfunction or running into traffic at the exit among others. Granted, when you know you won't reach the end of the race in good racing conditions you pit, but this was not the case as Rosberg and Vettel weren't scheduled to pit and they surely knew about this because one of them drives in the same team! Why risk having a botched pit stop and lose the lead when they can safely go to the end? It is not as if a rookie was driving the car either!

Also, that thing about Hamilton eating his tyres more than most of his rivals is a myth. Hamilton has shown on plenty of occasions that he can save the tyres and can make them last as much if not longer than Rosberg, for instance.

Let's face it, there is not a popular and an unpopular opinion about this. This was clearly a tactical blunder from Hamilton's side of the Mercedes garage and a very rejectful decision to make. You can have your personal view about who it is to blame but nothing can take away from the fact that it was a poor job that cost Mercedes an easy 1-2.
Colin Kolles on F111, 2011 HRT challenger: The car doesn't look too bad; it looks like a modern F1 car.
User avatar
Dj_bereta
Posts: 1513
Joined: 30 Aug 2009, 15:55

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by Dj_bereta »

CoopsII wrote:
Dj_bereta wrote:Alonso will follow Hill and Villeneuve footsteps instead of winning another title.

That makes no sense. Both Hill and Villeneuve only won the one title whilst Alonso already has two. Hill cashed in with a backmarker team before finishing his career with some respectability in the mid-field while Villeneuve became part of a brand new team before mooching about in a selection of moderately successful teams.

Unless you meant that Alonso wouldn't win another title in which case maybe comparing him to someone like Hakkinen would be more accurate.


I'm not comparing Alonso with Hill or Villeneuve, I'm saying Alonso will finish his career like Hill/Villeneuve, in a middlefield car, without a new title.

Hakkinen ended his career in a front runner car. It's a different case.
Waiting for Lotus hiring Johnny Cecotto jr.
User avatar
CoopsII
Posts: 4676
Joined: 15 Dec 2011, 09:33
Location: Starkiller Base Debris

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by CoopsII »

Dj_bereta wrote:I'm not comparing Alonso with Hill or Villeneuve,

Sorry, "Alonso will follow Hill and Villeneuve footsteps" sounded like a comparison.
Just For One Day...
User avatar
DemocalypseNow
Posts: 13185
Joined: 17 Aug 2009, 09:30
Location: Lost, send help
Contact:

Re: Unpopular F1 opinions

Post by DemocalypseNow »

Let's go through this one point at a time;

DanielPT wrote:These are formula 1 teams, they are the pinnacle in motorsport terms and should react on the fly to an ever changing environment.

Exactly. This is why they pitted at that moment. A very small window of opportunity opened up at that particular moment.

DanielPT wrote:Nevertheless, even if the data was okay and no such time was lost, a pit-stop is always a gamble. There is always a chance of a stuck jack, a misfitted tyre, stalling, releasing lights malfunction or running into traffic at the exit among others.

These risks are very low. You cannot run a racing team where decisions are predicated on your pit crew being bad at their job. You must also consider some of these risks were non-existent when Hamilton made his pit-stop. Being in first by a long way meant he came in for his stop to an empty pitlane. There was no risk of an unsafe release, being held up by other cars coming in and out of their boxes. The rest of the factors mentioned have such a low probability of occurring, they do not offset the advantages of pitting in the slightest. If they did, teams wouldn't even try to run an extra stop to be on fresher tyres at any race during the season.

DanielPT wrote:Granted, when you know you won't reach the end of the race in good racing conditions you pit, but this was not the case

Hamilton disagrees with you. He asked for new tyres. According to him, it was most certainly the case.

DanielPT wrote:Rosberg and Vettel weren't scheduled to pit and they surely knew about this because one of them drives in the same team! Why risk having a botched pit stop and lose the lead when they can safely go to the end?

Of course they new this. You seem to be suggesting Mercedes made such a fundamental mistake that even a ten year old would understand they had messed up. Rosberg and Vettel's decision on whether to pit or not had absolutely nothing to do with the call for Hamilton. Their driver felt uncomfortable staying on his worn tires, and according to the information that Mercedes had at their disposal at that particular moment, they had a large enough window in which to pit Hamilton. If the information had been absolutely correct (and without hindsight, there is nothing to suggest it wouldn't be), it would have been a strategical mistake not to pit him.

DanielPT wrote:Also, that thing about Hamilton eating his tyres more than most of his rivals is a myth. Hamilton has shown on plenty of occasions that he can save the tyres and can make them last as much if not longer than Rosberg, for instance.

I will admit this was bordering on hearsay and isn't a solid argument. But it doesn't change the fact Hamilton requested a fresh set of tyres from his team over the radio.

DanielPT wrote:This was clearly a tactical blunder from Hamilton's side of the Mercedes garage and a very rejectful decision to make. You can have your personal view about who it is to blame but nothing can take away from the fact that it was a poor job that cost Mercedes an easy 1-2.

My view is not personal. I have no personal feelings for or against Mercedes or any of its employees in this situation. The problem is people trying to find a specific person to blame, when there is not one. Or at least, it is irrelevant who is at fault. To call it a "tactical blunder" is incorrect, and ignorant of the situation leading up to the incident.

The following figures are to portray an example, they are not necessarily accurate timings for the incident in question. But, let's say, if your data is telling you there is a 28 second gap between your lead car and your second car, and even assuming your pitstop is 50% slower than average (so, 4.5s instead of 3.0s), and you only require 25.5 seconds to complete the entire stop including entry and exit - can you explain a rationale for denying the driver his request for fresh tyres, when the information in front of you is suggesting he can have the fresh rubber he is asking for without conceding the lead?

The root cause of the entire incident was not a poor tactical choice. It was incorrect data being fed to the prat perch, which caused an incorrect decision to be taken. The only thing the team needs to understand is why that data wasn't coming through properly, and fix that. The human side is fine. The tactician did his job properly. Electing to keep Hamilton out would have amounted to dereliction of duty.
Novitopoli wrote:Everytime someone orders at Pizza Hut, an Italian dies.
Novitopoli wrote:Juve's Triplete: Calciopoli, doping & Mafia connections.

Image Image
Post Reply