sylus":n2cn28em said:
With the childlike and everyone elses fault attitude I foresee him being a Ferrari driver one day
That is funny, because my brother said exactly the same thing to me when he was criticizing the team previously. Hamilton once stated he wanted to remain with McLaren for his entire career, that in itself is rather a naive concept given today's yo yo nature of success in F1.
I can see things going several ways.
Either he pulls his socks up regarding his criticisms of the team, or he gets booted. I can imagine Ron Dennis is absolutely seething at the way Hamilton has been spouting off, and openly hinting at moving teams.
Of course, if he starts to win things will pan out differently. If not I think things will happen at the end of the season and Ferrari look very likely, considering Massa's current performance and the presumed anger Dennis must be feeling.
Yes it was unfair to refer to Button as a journeyman, but he is indeed very reliable.
If we cast our minds back to Hamilton's first season there is no doubting he was being mooted as the Second Coming.
The hype was incredible here in the UK and right across the world.
Here was the new Tiger Woods.
But especially here in the UK, after the drought we had had for so many years, for a British driver to look a certainty to take a title within a couple of years was huge. This is basically a British sport, played out worldwide.
His performance in that first season was truly incredible, and while others have indeed matched that level from the get go in F1, here was a British driver fulfilling the dream we all had.
I don't think any driver will match Schumacher's record.
Not because none are as good, Vettel is looking like a real contender, but because those controlling the sport know it would not be good for the sport so they will prevent it.
That, to me, makes for an artificial experience.
The fact they are making cars drive on tires designed to 'fail' really does go against my feeling of what F1 should be about.
When I was a kid in the seventies F1 was the pinnacle of motorsport, the cars were like space craft. You got the impression anything that could be done by the teams to gain advantage could be accommodated.
Of course that was not the case, but I was a kid.
It is true, however, that there is much more contrivance now to things, and it is all geared up to make it more 'entertaining'.
I cannot help but feel that if Bernie was in control of snooker he would introduce minimum time per shot to throw players like O'Sullivan, and if it were back in the days of Davis he would do the opposite.
I am glad they don't do refuelling now, it always made me nervous on the basis of safety, but the whole Kers thing bugs me.
Not the existence of the tech, but the fact they need to carry extra weight if they opt out of it.
I have the feeling that the changes are going to continue every season, imposed on the teams in some mad tribute to the October Revolution.
This may make for 'thrilling' close racing, and everything going down to the wire, in theory but not quite working out, but it leaves me cold.
Vettel is streets ahead in the right car, even though I love Webber and would dearly love him to get one championship in the bag before he retires, so I would be perfectly happy to see him win three championships back to back.
I don't believe they will let that happen though.
They are too late to stop him this season by the imposition of technological restraints, but if he wins by a good margin you can be sure they will do something to contain him next season.
That takes a bit of the buzz out of it for me.