bhall II wrote:Kiril Varbanov wrote:Ferrari has endured lots of changes in the last years with little or no visible championship effect.
That's the problem. Whenever someone new takes the helm, they inevitably bring with them their own vision of how the team should operate, and it resets the clock every time.
From the man Ferrari wanted....
[quote="
grandrix.com, July 20, 2016""]Brawn, Ferrari's now retired former technical director, has played down claims he is looking for a way back into F1, saying he has no desire for another "24-7" role.
Actually, he thinks the Maranello team should stick with Allison.
"They've got some very good people there," Brawn told Britain's Sky recently. "James Allison is excellent and if they give him the resources and give him the time, and put the infrastructure around him and great drivers, then they'll achieve success.
"But they mustn't overreact and they mustn't be reactive to what the media is saying," he insisted.
Oops.
And if this should come to pass...
grandprix.com, July 19, 2016 wrote:But La Gazzetta claims that Marchionne, who is also the Fiat Chrysler CEO, has decided to take more control of Ferrari, including an active say on the main management decisions.
...Ferrari is fücked, because Marchionne will run the team into the ground. He just proved it by letting Allison walk away having not shepherded a single design from start to finish; SF16-H would have been the first.
It seems nothing but the weather changes in Maranello.[/quote]
In this case only family reasons might have had a bigger influence than usual. Understandably JA would like to stay closer to his sons and maybe Ferrari/Marchionne's thoughts is: "It's better a less skilled TD but 100% focused on the team than a non full focused James Allison".
Anyway I think that next season will be a true nightmare for Ferrari