bhallg2k wrote:mnmracer wrote:[Your statements]
Aside from acknowledging that the RB7 was a great car, I'm not critical of Vettel in any of those ways. I don't knock Vettel for winning from the front; I don't knock Vettel for not having to "fight through the field" or for having "cracked under pressure"; I don't even fault him for his teammate.
Than I guess we're not on opposite sides of this.
That's the messed up thing about this though; usually a detractor starts a stupid argument or takes the 'great car' excuse and runs with it, which annoys me, which in turn makes you think I have a different agenda etc. I do want to keep those statements on record though, since they will often come back.
bhallg2k wrote:Objectively: By any metric, the RB7 was a brilliant car, an all-time great.
Yes and no. It's undeniable that Vettel would not have taken all the records if the RB7 wasn't brilliant, but it wasn't a FW14B, F2002 or F2004. Those cars had no contention. Take the FW14B, which was on average 0.97 seconds faster in qualifying. The RB7 had a 0.16 second average advantage. In 2002, Barrichello won more races than Webber got second places, and in 2004, Barrichello won as many races as Webber got second places last year, but only because Schumacher. Those cars were undeniable the fastest car on the track in almost every race, while most agree that the McLaren had an advantage over the RB7 in a lot of races.
Was the RB7 a great car? Without a doubt. Was it miles off the rest of the field, without competition and could any decent driver win the championship with it, like the FW14B, F2002 and F2004? No, I do not think so and the facts seem to support that. Mark Webber certainly couldn't, and what he has done in his career deserves more than to be put away as an average driver.
While maybe Alonso could have had a similair performance, I think he would have lost more points in races where the McLarens had the advantage. Hamilton I believe could have definitely not repeated that performance. World Champion? Yes, but not in the way Vettel did.
This whole 'Vettel is god or not' things discredits the discussion. Vettel is not god, and has not yet shown to be as good as Senna and Schunacher, but he is definitely doing things others couldn't and I think in similair points in their careers, he is as good as Senna and Schumacher, albeit either in their own best skillset. The question is, will he keep growing to be on par, or surpass them, at their best.