
1234!!!!!!WhiteBlue wrote:They were both F1 drivers mainly so I used the example. In in terms of LeMan specialists I most admire Allan McNish. The guy is really awesome.
I've been trying to tell you this for a week or so WB, I'm so happy to see you have changed your mind!WhiteBlue wrote:It looks like Eddie Jordan could be right with his theory for once. A number of things do fit.
This is what I wrote on another thread;pete555 wrote:After agreeing with you on another thread I can't back you on this one xpensive. I'm open to believe Schumacher "may" start the season, I'm 99% sure he won't see the halfway point. The new cars are a pig to drive and his time out is just too long to be coming back for a PR exercise. He gave up for a reason and the top ten is easily within a second of each other now. That never happened while he was racing before.
I havn't changed my mind. I still think that there are a lot of reasons for Schumacher against it as there are for it. We will have to look and see how he decides. With regard to Merc I have allways thought that they pursue Vettel and/or Schumacher. It is the logical thing to do.xpensive wrote:I've been trying to tell you this for a week or so WB, I'm so happy to see you have changed your mind!WhiteBlue wrote:It looks like Eddie Jordan could be right with his theory for once. A number of things do fit.
Wonder where do you get all these ideas WB, I envy you.WhiteBlue wrote:The most important aspect could be the fact that he did not really decide to step back but was forced by Montezemolo. On a year by year basis he would have continued but Monte wanted Kimi Reikkonen and we all know how that ended.
http://forums.speedgeezers.net/index.ph ... opic=23530xpensive wrote:Wonder where do you get all these ideas WB, I envy you.WhiteBlue wrote:The most important aspect could be the fact that he did not really decide to step back but was forced by Montezemolo. On a year by year basis he would have continued but Monte wanted Kimi Reikkonen and we all know how that ended.
As I remember things, with a little help from the FIA banning Renault's previously ok'd suspension, Schumacher (I'm not yet on first-name terms with him) still won quite a few races in 2006, didn't he?WhiteBlue wrote:Michael had had the say on his team mate since he agreed to come to Ferrari as the double champ and drive their dog of a car. It took the dream team four years to transform the hapless Ferrari team into a winning organization and then the 99 design fault on the tub cost Michael dearly with the leg fractures.
I think that Todt's philosophy was better to have a clear No1 driver and demand performance from him than risk the kind of events that McLaren got 2007 with Alonso and Hamilton. Obviously Michael could always satisfy Ferrari's performance demands. Unfortunately in 2005 the tyre rules went against Ferrari and Michael had to battle for race wins rather than fighting for the championship. 2006 wasn't much better and Alonso ran away with both titles. I still think that no other top driver could have made more of the Ferrari in those years than Michael did. One only has to see how badly Alonso struggled with the Renault 2008 and 2009 to see that in those situations the driver has to take bigger risks and the risk of mistakes rises.
The other point was that Michael had spend 15 years as the fittest and hardest working driver and he was getting tired of the demands he imposed on himself. He wasn't sure that he wanted to commit to a two year contract without a shot at another championship. So he did not sign up for 2008 as Montezemolo demanded. Obviously he also did not want to have another top driver in the car and Montezemolo was not prepared to let Kimi's option slip. So it all came together in a bad way and the dream team was gone in the space of two years. I always felt is was a great shame because 2007 could have easily been Michael's year again.