- 25 Apr 12, 23:13#301443
Let’s try to keep it all in this thread. I’ll start.
It’s been suggested on many occasions that I think there is a conspiracy going on at McLaren. I think something is going on at McLaren but I’m not convinced it’s a conspiracy. I hope its not, don’t think it is but I’ll keep an open mind. No –one believed there was a conspiracy for Piquet to crash his car but hey ho.
So what is going on? Here are my thoughts, starting first with:
Facts and observations.
McLaren reorganised the team when Heikki left making everything more central rather than the conventional system teams run where a driver and his side of the garage compete against the other side.
Both drivers had new engineers, Jenson’s is considerably older than Lewis’
Whitmarsh seems to have a problem with Lewis. (I discover more the more I read, but pick plenty up anyway by watching the body language and comments)
Jenson was the first driver Whitmarsh employed after he took charge of the team.
Whitmarsh seems to like Jenson a lot (“Lets talk about Jenson”, cried when Jenson won, constant talking him up, was with him during the red flag period while Lewis was in his room, keeps saying Lewis underestimated him, he’s done the best F1 drives in history etc etc)
Lewis gets the worse strategies and is frequently overtaken by Jenson in the pits or (particularly last year) has his qualifying screwed up.
Jenson is street wise, been round the block a few times, is not averse to playing situations to his advantage.
Lewis is naive. He’s grown up placing complete trust in McLaren, dislikes and is not good at playing politics.
Jenson appears personable, likable, sociable and has a good time with people in his team. (Takes mechanics and engineers out to dinner)
Lewis is more intense, wears his heart on his sleeve, cannot hide his feelings of joy, disappointment or anger. May be more difficult to be around than Jenson.
Lewis can drive around car problems.
Jenson needs the car set up exactly to his liking
Lewis likes a little oversteer
Jenson likes understeer
Lewis has had a lot of problems involving pitstops or strategy in the first few races that have adversely affected his results
Jenson has had a problem involving a pitstop that probably had no effect on the outcome of the race.
There are probably more facts and observations , but for now I’ll leave it there . So that said , what do I think is happening at McLaren? Well taking the actual pitstops first. I just put those down to bad luck.
And my theory.
Well we have a team that does not run separate sides of the garage but do things centrally. A ‘best strategy for McLaren’ is worked out. It turns out that lap 12 is optimum to pit. Driver A is leading, both drivers need new tyres. The engineers know that driver A is better at managing problems, driver B will loose more time if his car isn’t optimum, so it is to McLarens advantage to pit driver B first-chance of more overall points for McLaren. Driver A is disadvantaged and looses his place to driver B but not as many places as driver B would have lost if he’d been left out. Same scenario when needing wets.
Add to the above situation a much younger engineer on lewis’ car, maybe less experienced and less confident. He is possibly less likely to push through a strategy to suit his own driver over the preferred ‘McLaren’ strategy.
Maybe driver B gets more input on set up and design since he needs the car ‘just so.’ In fact it has been written that this is the case.
And then there is the feeling in the team that the boss prefers one driver. Nothing overtly said, just the perception, the same perception that is being picked up by so many F1 fans from just observing snippets of the dynamics. And Jenson is so nice, Lewis a little difficult. Might those things have some bearing if a split second decision has to be made on strategy? Might it not sway a decision one way?
And finally the personalities of the two drivers themselves; Lewis just wants to drive the car, trusts Mclaren to do the best for him, has relied on Mclaren from an early age. Jenson has learnt to fend for himself, he sees the way the land lies and uses it to his advantage.
It is against that background that I think Lewis may not be getting such a fair deal as Jenson.
And my dislike for Whitmarsh is his inability to act professionally. His inability to see that things at Mclaren are not working well from strategy, pitstops , driver management to an inability to capitalise on the fastest car out of the box with two of the best drivers on the grid.
Those are my thoughts. Ive been promising to write them down for a while. I'll be keen to read any reasoned responses. I think its important we ask questions when we think something is amiss.
It’s been suggested on many occasions that I think there is a conspiracy going on at McLaren. I think something is going on at McLaren but I’m not convinced it’s a conspiracy. I hope its not, don’t think it is but I’ll keep an open mind. No –one believed there was a conspiracy for Piquet to crash his car but hey ho.
So what is going on? Here are my thoughts, starting first with:
Facts and observations.
McLaren reorganised the team when Heikki left making everything more central rather than the conventional system teams run where a driver and his side of the garage compete against the other side.
Both drivers had new engineers, Jenson’s is considerably older than Lewis’
Whitmarsh seems to have a problem with Lewis. (I discover more the more I read, but pick plenty up anyway by watching the body language and comments)
Jenson was the first driver Whitmarsh employed after he took charge of the team.
Whitmarsh seems to like Jenson a lot (“Lets talk about Jenson”, cried when Jenson won, constant talking him up, was with him during the red flag period while Lewis was in his room, keeps saying Lewis underestimated him, he’s done the best F1 drives in history etc etc)
Lewis gets the worse strategies and is frequently overtaken by Jenson in the pits or (particularly last year) has his qualifying screwed up.
Jenson is street wise, been round the block a few times, is not averse to playing situations to his advantage.
Lewis is naive. He’s grown up placing complete trust in McLaren, dislikes and is not good at playing politics.
Jenson appears personable, likable, sociable and has a good time with people in his team. (Takes mechanics and engineers out to dinner)
Lewis is more intense, wears his heart on his sleeve, cannot hide his feelings of joy, disappointment or anger. May be more difficult to be around than Jenson.
Lewis can drive around car problems.
Jenson needs the car set up exactly to his liking
Lewis likes a little oversteer
Jenson likes understeer
Lewis has had a lot of problems involving pitstops or strategy in the first few races that have adversely affected his results
Jenson has had a problem involving a pitstop that probably had no effect on the outcome of the race.
There are probably more facts and observations , but for now I’ll leave it there . So that said , what do I think is happening at McLaren? Well taking the actual pitstops first. I just put those down to bad luck.
And my theory.
Well we have a team that does not run separate sides of the garage but do things centrally. A ‘best strategy for McLaren’ is worked out. It turns out that lap 12 is optimum to pit. Driver A is leading, both drivers need new tyres. The engineers know that driver A is better at managing problems, driver B will loose more time if his car isn’t optimum, so it is to McLarens advantage to pit driver B first-chance of more overall points for McLaren. Driver A is disadvantaged and looses his place to driver B but not as many places as driver B would have lost if he’d been left out. Same scenario when needing wets.
Add to the above situation a much younger engineer on lewis’ car, maybe less experienced and less confident. He is possibly less likely to push through a strategy to suit his own driver over the preferred ‘McLaren’ strategy.
Maybe driver B gets more input on set up and design since he needs the car ‘just so.’ In fact it has been written that this is the case.
And then there is the feeling in the team that the boss prefers one driver. Nothing overtly said, just the perception, the same perception that is being picked up by so many F1 fans from just observing snippets of the dynamics. And Jenson is so nice, Lewis a little difficult. Might those things have some bearing if a split second decision has to be made on strategy? Might it not sway a decision one way?
And finally the personalities of the two drivers themselves; Lewis just wants to drive the car, trusts Mclaren to do the best for him, has relied on Mclaren from an early age. Jenson has learnt to fend for himself, he sees the way the land lies and uses it to his advantage.
It is against that background that I think Lewis may not be getting such a fair deal as Jenson.
And my dislike for Whitmarsh is his inability to act professionally. His inability to see that things at Mclaren are not working well from strategy, pitstops , driver management to an inability to capitalise on the fastest car out of the box with two of the best drivers on the grid.
Those are my thoughts. Ive been promising to write them down for a while. I'll be keen to read any reasoned responses. I think its important we ask questions when we think something is amiss.
You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.
Abe Lincoln
Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power. Abe Lincoln
Abe Lincoln
Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power. Abe Lincoln