Lotus what great opportunity lost.
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Lotus what great opportunity lost.
I can't help but think Hamilton or Alonso would have dragged the E21 to the Brazilian GP, still in WDC contention.
Raikkonnen and Grosjean flubbed it.
Raikkonnen and Grosjean flubbed it.
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Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
1. This isnt exactly in-depth (EDIT: Was in the In-Depth forum when I made this post)
2. The Mercedes/Ferrari arent much better or worse than the Lotus, its only toward the end of the season that the Lotus has been consistently better than them.
In the mid season the Mercedes was better than the Lotus and at the start of the season the Ferrari was better than the Lotus.
3. Nobody was going to take any car but Webber's to the last round in contention this year, the Red Bull has been mighty since Monza (& before then it was pretty good!).
2. The Mercedes/Ferrari arent much better or worse than the Lotus, its only toward the end of the season that the Lotus has been consistently better than them.
In the mid season the Mercedes was better than the Lotus and at the start of the season the Ferrari was better than the Lotus.
3. Nobody was going to take any car but Webber's to the last round in contention this year, the Red Bull has been mighty since Monza (& before then it was pretty good!).
Last edited by Black_Flag_11 on Sat Nov 30, 2013 12:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
I would say since Britai, only Hamilton was keeping them at bay (Won at hungary, comfortably leading by his own admissions in Britain, and he's not one to talk postively)
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
I agree it's a shame Grosjean and Raikkonen weren't both on form at the same point of the season; Germany was pretty cool where they were both chasing for the win but aside from that it's either been one or the other.
Would they have gotten 3rd in the championship? Perhaps. But I don't think they'd have done better than that.
Would they have gotten 3rd in the championship? Perhaps. But I don't think they'd have done better than that.
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Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
Raikkonen had back pain. Cut him some slack.
“I'm happy, but there's nothing to jump around about.”
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Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
I really, really doubt that
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
DeeMclarenAce wrote:I can't help but think Hamilton or Alonso would have dragged the E21 to the Brazilian GP, still in WDC contention.
Raikkonnen and Grosjean flubbed it.
Nonsense. Hamilton and Alonso couldn't even keep up with their own teammates throughout the season on a race by race basis. There is too little between the drivers for conclusions like this to be valid.
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Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
As long as we have people like Villeneuve given chance to voice their opinion publicly some people will be encouraged to start threads like this one.
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
motorfinger wrote:As long as we have people like Villeneuve given chance to voice their opinion publicly some people will be encouraged to start threads like this one.
Everyone is entitled to have an opinion and give it,that is what a forum is for!
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
Alonso couldn't get out of Renault/Lotus soon enough when they threw him a lifeline. He chose not to drag them into contention. And if Alonso really is better than Hamilton, there goes your argument.DeeMclarenAce wrote:I can't help but think Hamilton or Alonso would have dragged the E21 to the Brazilian GP, still in WDC contention.
Raikkonnen and Grosjean flubbed it.
We don't know the full details of the Räikkönen/Lotus saga, but he put them right where they deserved to be; in every sense of the word.
Use every man after his desert, and who should scape whipping? Use them after your own honour and dignity.
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Maria de Villota - Jules Bianchi
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
I sense this is a DEFENSE 2007 HERO thread rather than talking Lotus.
109_6 For you is your faith, and for me, my faith.
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
Alaaddin wrote:I sense this is a DEFENSE 2007 HERO thread rather than talking Lotus.
My first reaction to this post was that Räikkönen doesn't need defending. But then I realised that, depending on whose PR-nonsense one is partial to, it could mean defending Hamilton or Alonso or Räikkönen!

But whichever of those three drivers I look at, I still feel that Lotus's real problem wasn't in the driver's department (apart perhaps from taking far too long to switch Grosjean on); it was in keeping the designer of the car on board, in developing the car and a system that cost them a lot of money for zero return, and finally in the financial department. No matter how good the car was, it still failed to attract the required funding.
No driver is ever that much better; though some may be better suited to the car placed under their bum.
Edit: Forgot to add that Räikkönen is indeed the hero of 2007 in my book; despite Ferrari being able to provide him with the car he needed. (Just to clear any doubt from the minds of those who got stuck on my first sentence here.

Use every man after his desert, and who should scape whipping? Use them after your own honour and dignity.
Maria de Villota - Jules Bianchi
Maria de Villota - Jules Bianchi
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
It is not that hard to understand whom i meant. Just think which driver NEEDS that season to be rated high. You will certainly see the result.Fiki wrote:Alaaddin wrote:I sense this is a DEFENSE 2007 HERO thread rather than talking Lotus.
My first reaction to this post was that Räikkönen doesn't need defending. But then I realised that, depending on whose PR-nonsense one is partial to, it could mean defending Hamilton or Alonso or Räikkönen!![]()
But whichever of those three drivers I look at, I still feel that Lotus's real problem wasn't in the driver's department (apart perhaps from taking far too long to switch Grosjean on); it was in keeping the designer of the car on board, in developing the car and a system that cost them a lot of money for zero return, and finally in the financial department. No matter how good the car was, it still failed to attract the required funding.
No driver is ever that much better; though some may be better suited to the car placed under their bum.
Edit: Forgot to add that Räikkönen is indeed the hero of 2007 in my book; despite Ferrari being able to provide him with the car he needed. (Just to clear any doubt from the minds of those who got stuck on my first sentence here.)
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
DeeMclarenAce wrote:I can't help but think Hamilton or Alonso would have dragged the E21 to the Brazilian GP, still in WDC contention.
Raikkonnen and Grosjean flubbed it.
Not if Ferrari paid them to 'mysteriously' develop sudden need to have surgery for issue they had for years. But then again, neither was paid as lavishly as Kimi, meaning Lotus could spend even more money developing the car and/or find pay funds faster.
And I don't blame Grosjean, he would be much higher if not for all the orders to let Kimi through or tactics set up to slow Kimi's rivals, or that backstab in one of last races together.
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
Irbis wrote:DeeMclarenAce wrote:I can't help but think Hamilton or Alonso would have dragged the E21 to the Brazilian GP, still in WDC contention.
Raikkonnen and Grosjean flubbed it.
Not if Ferrari paid them to 'mysteriously' develop sudden need to have surgery for issue they had for years. But then again, neither was paid as lavishly as Kimi, meaning Lotus could spend even more money developing the car and/or find pay funds faster.
And I don't blame Grosjean, he would be much higher if not for all the orders to let Kimi through or tactics set up to slow Kimi's rivals, or that backstab in one of last races together.
Come again? Alonso and Lewis are both on €20M, while Kimi has a base salary of just €3M. It's said he has a deal where he is paid a reported €40,000 per point, but that would still give him "only" €10M, half of what the others get (and that's assuming they don't get any performance incentives themselves, which is highly unlikely). Where do you work out that they aren't paid as "lavishly" as Kimi? Just how much do you think he's on?
source, by the way:
http://www.crash.net/f1/news/191002/1/f1_2013_driver_salaries_published__but_who_earns_most.html
BTW, how many points do you think Alonso would have were it not for "all the orders to let xxx through or tactics set up to slow xxx's rivals?" Or is it just Kimi you appear to have it in for?
As for being able to drag the Lotus to the Brazilian GP still in WDC contention, I can only assume you haven't been watching the races. Even Webber in the sister car couldn't stay in contention long before the season's end, and unless you believe the Lotus is quicker than the RBR(!) you must have a seriously inflated view of Alonso's or Lewis' abilities. Seb's been untouchable in the RBR and nobody, nobody has been even remotely close to him. I wonder where you feel the Lotus should have had wins which would have brought the deficit down. Which races in your opinion did they gift to Seb?
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Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
One of the Lotus problems was their slow qualy/start positions, similar to Ferraris'. But in the races Alonso was so much better than in qualy, whereas the Lotuses remained about the same in races as their qualy times. And the Mercedes started so much better/higher up the grids than Lotus and Ferrari, but slipped in the races to about Lotus average pace.
However looking at how much faster/better Alonso was than Massa, Raikkonen and Grosjean in races, the OP has a point about what Alonso could have done in a Lotus.
However looking at how much faster/better Alonso was than Massa, Raikkonen and Grosjean in races, the OP has a point about what Alonso could have done in a Lotus.
Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
POBRatings wrote:One of the Lotus problems was their slow qualy/start positions, similar to Ferraris'. But in the races Alonso was so much better than in qualy, whereas the Lotuses remained about the same in races as their qualy times. And the Mercedes started so much better/higher up the grids than Lotus and Ferrari, but slipped in the races to about Lotus average pace.
However looking at how much faster/better Alonso was than Massa, Raikkonen and Grosjean in races, the OP has a point about what Alonso could have done in a Lotus.
I respect your stats and you clearly have a wealth of information to back up your claims, but from a spectator's point of view I was always under the impression that e.g. Kimi was always much faster in the races than qualifying and made up a lot of places because of this. Feeling was always that if he qualified higher he may have been able to challenge even more but his regular podium appearances would suggest that his races were better than his qualifying. Ironically, Alonso hasn't always been the best qualifier himself so he may have been in the same boat!
What would you attribute his better race showing than qualifying performance if his speed remained constant?
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Re: Lotus what great opportunity lost.
Zoue wrote:POBRatings wrote:One of the Lotus problems was their slow qualy/start positions, similar to Ferraris'. But in the races Alonso was so much better than in qualy, whereas the Lotuses remained about the same in races as their qualy times. And the Mercedes started so much better/higher up the grids than Lotus and Ferrari, but slipped in the races to about Lotus average pace.
However looking at how much faster/better Alonso was than Massa, Raikkonen and Grosjean in races, the OP has a point about what Alonso could have done in a Lotus.
I respect your stats and you clearly have a wealth of information to back up your claims, but from a spectator's point of view I was always under the impression that e.g. Kimi was always much faster in the races than qualifying and made up a lot of places because of this. Feeling was always that if he qualified higher he may have been able to challenge even more but his regular podium appearances would suggest that his races were better than his qualifying. Ironically, Alonso hasn't always been the best qualifier himself so he may have been in the same boat!
What would you attribute his better race showing than qualifying performance if his speed remained constant?
Kimi is also a great racer, and manages to keep out of trouble, is so consistent which I think accounts for his better race results than qualy. I measure gaps from the front and Kimi's races were only slightly closer than his qualy gap, whereas Fred's was almost half-a-second better in races than in qualy. Perhaps tyre management or treatment /response by the two cars came into it? This I don't know. By my calcs Kimi was slightly faster on season average than Fred in qualy but much slower in race average.