Gerhard Berger wrote:Was there a reason why the works team didn't enter F1 earlier? As i understand they were going to convert Sauber into the works team and have 2 from Schumacher/Frentzen/Wendlinger as their drivers. It never materialised though.
The drive to return Mercedes to F1 found that Mercedes did not have the wherewithal to create its own F1 team. Not the money nor the skill-sets, which are very different from building S-Class saloons.Ferraripilot wrote:Gerhard Berger wrote:Was there a reason why the works team didn't enter F1 earlier? As i understand they were going to convert Sauber into the works team and have 2 from Schumacher/Frentzen/Wendlinger as their drivers. It never materialised though.
Good question. Anyone?
Hubbert bought into McLaren with a view to cut some corners and have fast success. He did not listen to Ron who never wanted relinquish control to Mercedes and kept hoping he could swing a deal somehow. But Ron was clever enough to get Bahrain to buy into the company to replace Mercedes. They will have a lot less operative issues and be a relatively comfortable share holder except in times like these when they screw with the race for propaganda.NewtonMeter wrote:I'm sure there are some much more knowledgeable than I am, but IIRC merc attempted several times to buy McLaren, but Ron would have none of it.
Anybody who has been a project or even program manager knows that those jobs are the most demanding. You always sit between several chairs and only your skills to balance many balls and egos can save the day. To manage the Mercedes motor sport program for such a long time with some nice DTM championships and finally getting a victorious F1 works team together surely is a fine achievement for the man. The podium in Shanghai was a just reward. As Lauda would say: I pull my cap.marcush. wrote:Norby is well connected into this and he sure has not much more to do than lobbying and blowing the merc fanfare. Internally his main job is making sure the money is rolling longterm and decisions like buying BrawnGP is actually happening.
I agree. You can actually see his style throughout the years. Slick, simple but effective. For example the BGP001 is basically an FW28.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Have you not seen the similarities in design between the W02 and W03? They are indeed familial, which tells me this(the W03) is a Bigois baby.
I beg to differ, my xperience from some 20 years of management is quite the opposite, such people always finds an xcuse for their failures, why I'm in total agreement with marcush, Haug's job-description has probably never been better defied than that.WhiteBlue wrote:Anybody who has been a project or even program manager knows that those jobs are the most demanding.marcush. wrote:Norby is well connected into this and he sure has not much more to do than lobbying and blowing the merc fanfare. Internally his main job is making sure the money is rolling longterm and decisions like buying BrawnGP is actually happening.
Illogical and purely anecdotal, "The few who I know stink, therefore they ALL must stink!" Can we move on? We all know X thinks everyone in F1, right down to the receptionist back in England should have a doctorate in engineering. Frankly it all stinks of sour grapes to me. X I'm sorry a guy who doesn't even have a degree in engineering gets to be so much closer to F1 than you.xpensive wrote:I beg to differ, my xperience from some 20 years of management is quite the opposite, such people always finds an xcuse for their failures...
That isn't good news.F1 team Mercedes to lose Aabar ownership
Mercedes GP could be set to lose a major shareholder.
Citing informed sources, the German ‘Manager Magazin’ reports that the Abu Dhabi investment vehicle Aabar is in talks to end its involvement with the Brackley based team as well as Mercedes’ parent Daimler. Daimler and Aabar did not immediately comment.
Aabar owns 40 per cent of Mercedes GP, but recently watered-down its Daimler involvement from 9 to just 3 per cent.