- 15 Oct 13, 08:49#376519
I can speak for Ferrari in recent times they have shown a willingness to answer the fans on both their success and failure. For example they were very open about crediting their success under Shumi to the relentless laps of practice they did. Likewise in recent years they were open about their wind tunnel problems. if course they didn't have to, but they did and I think that is a good way to treat the f1 fans and public. I'd add that your old team have also been open. I'm thinking about how they dealt with the early clash of Checo and Jenson. I liked that.
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"He was the fastest driver I ever saw - faster even than Fangio"
________________________- Mike Hawthorn on Alberto Ascari
The thing is Redbull passed scrutineering at Singapore , that's all the explaining they need to do.
That is all they are obliged to do, yes. However, it would have been a positive gesture to the fans and pundits who have asked the question in a reasonable way to put forward a response.
But why should they? When every other dominant performance in F1 history hasn't had to.
I can speak for Ferrari in recent times they have shown a willingness to answer the fans on both their success and failure. For example they were very open about crediting their success under Shumi to the relentless laps of practice they did. Likewise in recent years they were open about their wind tunnel problems. if course they didn't have to, but they did and I think that is a good way to treat the f1 fans and public. I'd add that your old team have also been open. I'm thinking about how they dealt with the early clash of Checo and Jenson. I liked that.
Sent from my GT-I9500 using Tapatalk [url='http://tapatalk.com/m?id=10']now Free[/url]

"He was the fastest driver I ever saw - faster even than Fangio"
________________________- Mike Hawthorn on Alberto Ascari