FoxHound wrote:Fulcrum wrote:It is an interesting situation. I commented in the team thread about the Verstappen promotion being a lose-lose situation for Ricciardo, and it is proving to be the case so far. They're both top quality, it's just the nature of Verstappen's career trajectory is beginning to take the shine off of Ricciardo's.
Seeing the change in Ricciardo's mood is telling though. I think he knows this is a critical situation for his career. He's got nowhere to jump to, unlike Vettel, and no laurels to rest on either. This Red Bull revival was meant to be 'his time', and now his reign is threatened before it began.
It should make for great viewing though. I don't think he's the type to back down from a challenge, so I hope the degree of competition is maintained for their partnership.
Good points raised there.
I also don't see Ricciardo backing down. But he has come out to the press with some negative views about the situation, which automatically backs him into a corner.
There is already precedent within this team of an Aussie ceding ground to a young Germanic prodigy. History seems geared to this lightning striking twice.
And this brings me back to my first point, in Ric not backing down.
2017 offers plenty of opportunity to Red Bull and the chasers to close the gap to Mercedes. If Red Bull do so, and if the championship situation calls for it, will Red Bull allow Ric to race Vers?
It's all very well at present being slower than the Mercs, but when it arises, I see some implications for Ricciardo.
Will they seek their new prodigious poster boy as the De facto unchallenged leader of the team?
True. The young Germanic prodigy was also, generally, quicker than the Aussie (Webber). When the new Aussie arrived, the prodigy wasn't favoured as overtly as before.
If Red Bull see evidence that Verstappen is legitimately quicker, I don't foresee any favours being extended to Ricciardo. Perhaps this is the ulterior motive behind Horner's comments about Verstappen's qualifying performances? In the event of both driver's being equally capable, it wouldn't surprise me if Red Bull sided with the option that generates the most publicity - surely not Ricciardo in that case.
So Ricciardo is fighting the tide at the moment. Behind the scenes, in the garage, on the track, whenever he gets interviewed by Sky hacks who always ask the most clumsily loaded questions. No wonder he's behaving like a cornered animal. He's going to have to correct it soon though, and he'll only feel positive again with some good results.
The slightly jarring thing with Red Bull is the lack of sentiment. They're clearly not nostalgic, highly future focused, which is potentially detrimental in the 'now'. Vettel jumped before he was broomed. Not that I think they would have actually ditched him, but his leaving was probably something they didn't find to be considerably negative. It certainly iterated their development program a few steps fairly painlessly.
Compare that with the approach taken by Ferrari and they clearly sit at opposite ends of the spectrum with respect to the value they ascribe to loyalty and 'goodwill'.