Sep 292012
 

I’ll put it out there straight away. I’m a big fan of Lewis Hamilton. I think that his talent in the car is incredible, and watching him put it to work is fascinating. He’s in many ways like Jean Alesi: talented but troubled. A Juan Pablo Montoya for this generation. I’m also a big fan of McLaren. I have nothing but respect and admiration for Ron Dennis, who has steered the organisation through forty years of change and conflict. Martin Whitmarsh has taken the reins brilliantly, and consistently gives great TV interviews. So Hamilton leaving McLaren is in many ways for me similar to when Colin McRae left Subaru for Ford. When favourite driver leaves favourite team, what’s a fan to do?

That being said, I’m finding the press/Twitter/forum comments on Friday’s driver market news very interesting. If you’ve been living on Mars recently, you may not know that Lewis Hamilton is to leave McLaren at the end of 2012 and join Mercedes. Lewis’s McLaren seat will be filled by Sergio Perez, and Lewis is chucking Michael Schumacher out of his Mercedes.

Lewis Hamilton

Lewis Hamilton, Vodafone McLaren Mercedes, Silverstone 2012
Photo ©giles-guthrie.com

Going to Mercedes

If rumour is correct, Mercedes are paying Hamilton a lot of money. The deal is for three years, and it’s reputedly worth $100m (according to The Daily Telegraph). This would probably make Hamilton the most richly rewarded driver ever. (Footnote: It can be difficult to track this accurately, but I think that Schumacher, Alonso and Raikkonen have all been paid $26m per season by Ferrari. I’m not aware of any rivers getting more than this)

Because of this, the wide-scale perception is that Hamilton has gone to Mercedes to chase the dollar. If that’s true, it’s difficult to criticise. F1 drivers have a short career, and therefore limited opportunity to earn top-dollar that they must then live on for the remaining 60 years of their life. Also, in F1 circles, money equals value. And ranking the drivers by earnings is a sure-fire way to compare how each is valued against the other. The dollar is the ultimate leveller, the ultimate arbiter of that value.

But I’ve followed Formula 1 for a number of years now. And I’m seeing something that the cash-obsessed commentators seem to have forgotten. The simple fact of life is that Michael Schumacher won 7 F1 World Championships and Jenson Button 1, under Ross Brawn’s stewardship. That’s not even counting the sportscar success with TWR Jaguar. Nobody would ever say that a driver goes to Red Bull “for the money,” with that team, everyone would acknowledge the design team led by Adrian Newey. So why is Ross Brawn being dissed? People are blinded by money.

Furthermore, Mercedes has had the best engine in F1 for the entire duration of the 2.4 V8 regulations. In 2014, the regulations change again, and by aligning himself with the AMG Mercedes F1 team, Hamilton has guaranteed that he’ll get first dibs on any new trick engines coming out. He will probably have design input so that right from the very start the torque maps suit his driving style.

When signing deals, drivers need to work out not which team is best now, but which will be best when they’re at full-strength in the new deal. It’s crystal ball stuff.

Leaving McLaren

The big thing (for me, at least, as a McLaren fan) is the question of why Lewis would leave the Woking team that nurtured him from the gawky yet precocious teenager that marched up to Ron Dennis and asked for a drive.

Leaving aside McLaren’s image as a corporate drone machine, I think that it’s possible Lewis is looking for a different challenge. Maybe he’s seen the 8 world championships that Ross Brawn has architected, and decided he fancies some of that action. Maybe the fact that Mercedes engine boss Norbert Haug spends all his time with the AMG outfit is having an impact. But these are reasons to join Mercedes, not ones to leave McLaren.

There has been a definite cooling of the McLaren-Mercedes relationship in recent years. Some say it’s because of McLaren releasing their MP4-12c road car straight into the path of Mercedes’ SLS. I’m not so sure that it’s so petty. I think it’s that Mercedes wants its own F1 team carrying its own name to be successful. But the upshot is that McLaren is no longer the favoured Mercedes partner. In 2012, it has started paying for the Mercedes V8s, and that’s a cash hole that even the massive McLaren would notice.

And for how long will McLaren remain “Vodafone McLaren Mercedes”? I’m not sure I believe that the Woking outfit is working on its own power plants, but I’m fairly certain that Vodafone is on its way out. If not of F1 as a whole, then almost certainly out of McLaren. Vodafone has terminated extraordinarily successful sponsorship arrangements with the Triple Eight V8 Supercar team, and with the Australian national cricket team. And it has been absent from the rear wings of the McLaren F1 cars for a while now. It all points to a staged pull-out from McLaren that will leave them hunting a new title sponsor.

That’s not where a driver wants to be. Title sponsors and manufacturer engine partners are talismans in F1. A team without one or the other is wounded. And a team without both is in for a spell in the doldrums. Could that be McLaren in 2014? Just as Mercedes starts bringing its new-spec engines online? To its Brackley in-house team first?

Michael Schumacher

Michael Schumacher, AMG Mercedes Petronas, Silverstone 2012
Photo ©giles-guthrie.com

Bye Bye Michael (reprise)

It’s been fun but the time has come
To bring down the final curtain move along
Time to face what you know in your heart
That the world keeps on turning, you’ve lost your part
It is never ending
Take a look if you’re not sure at the millions gone before

It’s been hard when the going is rough
Or you’re many thousand miles away from home
To believe that it’s all worthwhile
That it makes the slightest difference in the end
And it gets harder

Will you stay until you’re pushed
Or will the day dawn when you’re on your own?
You look around
There’s only empty rows of chairs
Where once your fair weather friends
Hung on every word that you said
TONY BANKS – THE FINAL CURTAIN LYRICS

Michael Schumacher’s F1 career has had something of everything in it. Records have been smashed, and world championships won with different teams. It was Schumacher who finally wrested Scuderia Ferrari F1 from its autophagic political nightmare. Even the mighty Jean Todt required the services of the German for that, and Ferrari was required to put aside its innate Italian-ness in order to reattain the success of the past. Of course, Schumacher then rewarded the Scuderia with five world championships. They subsequently won a sixth with Raikkonen, and look set fair to take a seventh with Alonso in 2012.

But — while the circumstances of Schumacher’s departure from the Scuderia were not respectful — Schumacher’s second bite of the F1 cherry has ultimately failed to deliver much of the spark for which he was known in his first time around. Some spirited driving in the Mercedes has been evident, but being reunited with Brawn in a German works team has not enabled Schumacher to reach his former greatness once more. Neither, to be fair, has he been demolished by Nico Rosberg, but it does seem like Rosberg is usually better-placed to take advantage of opportunities. It is Rosberg who has delivered AMG Mercedes’s only Grand Prix win of the current era. Meanwhile, Schumacher’s error rate is too high. It says something of the respect that the F1 world still has for him that while similarly crashy Romain Grosjean and Pastor Maldonado are being hung out to dry, Schumacher is being gently ignored, like an elderly relative who’s developed late-onset Tourette’s. And while the Italian press lines up to castigate the off-the-pace Felipe Massa, still the Germans hope for a late resurgence by their ageing hero.

It’s time for Michael to go. But has he once again been denied the opportunity to retire of his own volition? A sad end to his career.

A Matter of Opinion on “Too Young”

One of the Sauber-Ferrari drivers has made a real impression this year. Not just for car speed, but for maturity of driving. Sergio “Checo” Perez came to Sauber riding the crest of a wave of Telmex cash. And he has come close to winning two Grands Prix this year. In each case he’s done it by being able to overtake cars on track, and being able to work leftfield strategies to his advantage. In fact, it appears that his car speed is a little lacking, certainly over one lap, as he is often in the teens in qualifying. The fact that he’s beaten the “works” Ferraris on a number of occasions (including at the Italian Grand Prix) is remarkable.

Sergio "Checo" Perez

Sergio “Checo” Perez, Sauber Ferrari, Silverstone 2012
Photo ©giles-guthrie.com

Not quite as remarkable as Ferrari boss Luca di Montezemolo saying he was “too young” for graduation to the Scuderia. Massa is in desperate need of being put out to pasture, and Perez looks very much the up-and-comer. But Ferrari passed, and McLaren didn’t. It does rather look like McLaren has made the better choice here. Perez has something to offer, and contemporary McLaren will be able to shape and nurture him to bring him on. Formula 1 is all about seizing the opportunities when they’re presented, and that is true for teams just as much as it is for personnel. I suspect Ferrari could rue the day they let him slip. Presumably just as BMW/Sauber did when they let a young Sebastien Vettel go test a Red Bull.

The One Left Out in the Cold

Someone in all of this has got to be feeling pretty sore. Paul di Resta has been in Sahara Force India, and doing a great job. He’s seen off the talented Nico Hulkenburg, and has delivered a number of very mature performances in Mercedes’ junior team, frequently transcending the car or working around its failures. He must have felt he was a shoo-in for whichever Mercedes seat was vacated by the Hamilton/Schumacher switcheroo, but that’s not happened. No seat appeared at Mercedes, and McLaren snapped up Perez, leaving di Resta out in the wilderness. Paul’s managers should be on the phone to Maranello right about now…

Paul di Resta

Paul di Resta, Sahara Force India, Silverstone 2012
Photo ©giles-guthrie.com

And so…

There comes a time in every F1 season where the anticipation of next season is at least as strong as the excitement at the remainder of the current. I think we’re at that point now. There’s a liberal smattering of great drivers across the top four teams, and the stage is set fair for some epic contests. Friday’s changes are, in my opinion, most definitely for the better.

 

Aug 192012
 

Felipe: Your F1 career is behind you. Can you confirm you understand this message

Felipe Massa has been the #2 Ferrari F1 driver for a very long time now. In fact, since the team dropped Rubens Barrichello at the end of 2005, the second car has been piloted by Massa. Now it looks as if the Scuderia has lost patience with the Brazilian, and is ready to cast him aside at the end of the 2012 season, perhaps sooner.

When he entered the sport in 2002 with Sauber, it seemed as if he was a preordained Ferrari driver, farmed out to the customer team to get some experience. When I watched him at Silverstone that year, he didn’t exactly seem at ease with the car, alternately prodding it then chasing it through each turn.

Felipe Massa, Sauber, Silverstone 2002
image ©giles-guthrie.com

Age and experience have definitely mellowed that style, and he has been able to rack up 11 Formula 1 wins in his six years at the team. I would normally at this point make some bitchy comment about the number of Drivers’ and Constructors’ Championships the team has amassed in this time, but the fact of the matter is that Massa has never had anything other than a superstar driving the other car in the team.  The only time this could be argued was in 2008, where Kimi Räikkönen was in the slough of demotivation. Massa capitalised, scoring 6 of his 11 wins in just this one year, on the way to losing the championship ten seconds after it looked in the bag.

But in Michael Schumacher, Kimi Räikkönen and Fernando Alonso, Felipe has found himself pitted against the best. He’s defaulted to the role of “competent number two”, which can be a nice safe secure place for an F1 driver in a top team. Most of the money and adulation, hardly any of the real pressure. Let’s not kid ourselves though: Felipe has never really looked like threatening the greats on the other side of the garage.

Looking back, Felipe’s career has had a number of shocks that would cause even the most mentally-stable of drivers some difficulty. It seems as if Felipe has not recovered from them fully.

It seems fairly certain that Massa was meant to play #2 to Michael Schumacher, and to learn from him.  But at the end of 2006, when Michel “retired”, instead of promoting Felipe to the #1 status he probably felt owed, the Scuderia offered asylum to McLaren refugee Kimi Räikkönen. Räikkönen was feeling unusually motivated as he’d been dropped by the Woking outfit, and as Alonso and Lewis Hamilton engaged in their Kramer vs Kramer scrap to lose the World Championship, Kimi quietly put in a string of car-defying performances to snatch the cup from the squabbling duo. Felipe was left behind in his dust.

In 2008, with point proven, Kimi went back to cruise-and-collect mode, and it was Felipe who picked up the baton. With McLaren bruised by the previous year’s fight, Felipe was able to capitalise on their lack of solidity, and took the championship fight to the last corner of the last lap of the last race. Finishing first, with Hamilton out of position, there was a heart-breaking number of seconds where Felipe celebrated while Hamilton’s wet-shod McLaren blew by a series of slick-shod cars in torrential rain. 30 seconds later Felipe’s championship had been ripped from him by the Briton.

The next year saw all teams struggling to play catch-up to Brawn. Massa’s struggle became particularly personal after a piece of suspension, jettisoned from Barrichello’s Brawn BGP001, impacted his helmet at somewhere north of 150mph. The season was over, and many pundits reckoned that was it for Felipe.

But it wasn’t. He came back for the 2010 championship, now with Fernando Alonso in the other car. Alonso must be soul-destroying to have as a team-mate. So fast and so dogged is he that no result within his grasp is allowed to slip away. For someone as inconsistent as Felipe it must have been a nightmare come true.

And then, to Hockenheim 2010. Massa leading, Alonso second. “Felipe, Fernando is faster than you,” came the message. Felipe was being asked to sacrifice the win. The win that would have come a year to the day since he nearly died in one of the red cars. How can you overcome such certain knowledge that the team does not want you to win races in its cars? I normally believe that the one who completes the race distance in the shortest time is the one who deserves to win, but in this case, Ferrari should have held station. It would have been the honourable thing to do.

Ten years later…
Felipe Massa, Ferrari, Silverstone 2012
image ©giles-guthrie.com

Now, mid-way through 2012, Massa is nowhere. Alonso has gathered the team up, with its terrible car, and personally driven them to the top of the driver’s championship. Felipe is struggling to get into the third part of qualifying. It really looks like it’s time for a change.

Nov 292011
 

Kimi Raikkonen. Image by Kenn Delbridge (Aural Asia) used under Creative Commons

I wonder if Eric Boullier (Team Manager) and Gerard Lopez (owner) have taken leave of their senses. In a team loaded to the gunwales with young, hungry drivers (including Grosjean and Senna), they have opted to take the 2008 World Champion Kimi Raikkonen.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I’ve seen Kimi drive, and I have seen him do things with a racing car that it’s possible to believe no other man could do. But Kimi only cares about driving the car, and even then, only when he is in with a chance of winning the race. We see glimpses of character from him, but he seems something of a recalcitrant beast, not interested in any of the human aspects of the sport.

For me, Kimi was at his best in 2003. Fighting with McLaren’s warhorse MP4-17d against Michael Schumacher in a notionally superior Ferrari. The McLaren was quick on its day, and Kimi could extract a difference from it to turn it into a regular winner. But part of me wonders if that year took too much from him, and since then he didn’t seem able to string together consistent performances from race to race.

His 2008 championship with Ferrari featured strong performances, but it has to be argued that the fact that McLaren were in the grip of one of the most acrimonious internecine battles in the history of the sport meant that the championship was there for the poaching by a rival’s driver. The manner in which Kimi ‘stole’ the championship from Woking is an object lesson in why teams devote their efforts to a single driver.

In 2009 though (in spite of him having delivered the 2008 championship), Ferrari wanted him gone. In a destructive atmosphere reminiscent of a couple who have split up seeing out the lease on their property, Kimi failed to shine. Understandable? Yes, but he did damage to his reputation that could yet be irrevocable. Ferrari paid Kimi $26 million to go and drive someone else’s car.

Put yourself in the position of a Formula 1 team manager: There are ranks and ranks of youngsters who want to be F1 drivers with every fibre of their being. Who will do whatever it takes, including bringing tens of millions of dollars to your team. Why – when you have your pick of such willing, pliant drivers – would you hire someone who another team manager wanted gone so much that they handed that driver $26m to go away?

Lotus Renault GP has been left rudderless by Robert Kubica’s accident and the unsuccessful design concept of their 2011 car. Seemingly the team is riven with internal political disputes surrounding its ownership and the ownership status of its title sponsor Lotus. They have spent 2011 wondering if Kubica will become well enough to drive, either in 2011 or 2012. The news that Kubica will not be back in 2012 appears to have left them scrambling for a ‘lead’ driver to accompany Vitaly ‘Croesus’ Petrov who has some skill behind the wheel, as well as other talents. Developing the car patently is not one of those talents.

Lotus Renault 2011 car. Image by Mark Houchin, used under Creative Commons

But can Kimi inspire the team? Can he spend hours and hours in the simulator, providing detailed feedback that allows the engineers to progress the development of the car? Will he be able, in the 10 days or so of testing, to get both himself and the car up to speed?

I doubt it, I really do.

Although, having witnessed some of that Kimi magic, I’d love to be proven wrong.

Thanks to Kenn Delbridgefor the image of Kimi Raikkonen and to Mark Houchin for the image of the Lotus Renault F1 car.