The observations Minardi makes ....
As I said before, because Vettel is the driver involved the 'observations' that Giancarlo Minardi made have elevated him from a has-been team's genial boss who probably needs his hearing-aids retuned to an F1 senior statesman oozing with wisdom of the ages. He'll be lucky if RBR don't sue his pension off his back for slander.
People only tend to lose respect for individuals like that when they keep hanging on in their own world, after the real world has passed them by. Minardi knew his time was up when it was, and bowed out while at the same time ensuring his team progressed to new ownership rather than sinking to oblivion, as others have done in the past.
Giancarlo Minardi deserves respect and not ridicule. The way you have written your quote is actually quite hypocritical i.e. the way you are describing Minardi is probably equally as 'slanderous' as what you are accusing him of doing.
OK, I accept what you are saying. But looking at the "big-picture" if you like, IMO a lot of people should step back and look at their own views about this situation. A lot of otherwise intelligent people are latching onto almost any straw that hints at discrediting Vettel and his wins. I accept that such continued dominance can be monotonous to neutrals and upsetting to supporters of other drivers but as I asked in another thread, what to people expect him to do? Hold back because many F1 fans don't like it?
Actually, I am not particularly supportive of the Red Bull team, as such. I have nothing against them, of course but feel that they lack pedigree and character. But those are not reasons to accuse them of cheating simply because they are so dominant. There have been other cases like this. In 1988 McLaren Honda won 15 out of 16 races on the calendar and in 2002 Ferrari were on top in 15 out of 17 races. In that year, Michael Schumacher was on the podium of every one of those 17 races. So why this anti-Vettel and ant-Red Bull vehemence now?
PS: Please don't say "Multi-21". It would be worse than ridiculous.
I agree, there are a lot of people reaching for any potential conspiracy theory, and I also agree than many people 'boo' or whatever because they find dominance boring. On the other hand, I think it's more of a middle ground between what they are saying and those that simply say 'Vettel is the absolute best' or that other teams have done it before.
Other teams have dominated before in eras where the development and operation rules were hugely more flexible in terms of the way teams could build and improve cars. With the regulations so tight now, there is only a reasonable margin of difference that there can be from one car to the next. This does make anything 'out of the norm' suspicious, and usually the other teams eventually latch on to whatever it is a la double diffusers / Brawn 2009, blown exhausts or whatever.
What Minardi is saying is that Red Bull have 'something' that is making them dominant. And that is undoubtedly true! The question is - is that something Vettel? (He genuinely could be the difference), or is that something a part of the car - this is equally as plausible. It could be something entirely legal - they obviously don't want to give the game away to the other teams and rightly so if this is the case! Adrian Newey is in my opinion the greatest designer / aero tech guy in the history of F1, so it's absolutely possible, in fact likely, that he has found either a loophole or a way to develop that is within the rules but not known to others.
On the other hand, it IS possible, that there is an advantage being gained unfairly. Perhaps they have found another way to mimic traction control? It is possible, in fact there are multiple ways it could be done, without it actually being traction control itself. That could be a grey area rather than being outright illegal.
I don't go for conspiracy theories - but I DO believe that teams at the sharp end of F1 like to 'bend' the rules as far as is possible without snapping them in two, this is not a conspiracy theory - this is proven fact year after year after year in F1 when there are debates in numerous teams, whether it's active suspension in Williams in the early 90s, independent front and rear breaking in McLaren in 1998, Double diffusers in Brawn in 2009 or adjustable ride heights in Red bull in the last couple of years.
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