- 01 Jul 14, 17:36#406368
T'as raison
Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connaît point. 
Oh, je suis choquée
Ce n'est pas possible!!
T'as raison



Discuss the sport you love with other motorsport fans
Oh, je suis choquée
Ce n'est pas possible!!
The reshuffling at Ferrari continues as the team look to emerge from their current slump with reports claiming they have hired several new engineers.
Ferrari haven't made a major assault on the Drivers' Championship in quite a few years and their stuttering start to the 2014 campaign resulted in Stefano Domenicali stepping down as team principal in April.
He was replaced by Marco Mattiacci, but it appears the Scuderia are set for a major overhaul of their technical department with Gazzetta dello Sport revealing they have hired 10 new engineers to work at Maranello.
The report claims they have managed to poach three experts from Mercedes, three aerodynamicists from Red Bull while a simulation specialist from the latter will also join them.
However, Mercedes non-executive chairman Niki Lauda has been quick to play down suggestions that they are losing top staff to their rivals.
"We have all the important engineers under contract," he told Germany's Auto Motor Und Sport. "We all remain on board and have long-term contracts with our major engineers."
And, isn't that what di Montezemolo was arguing against?
I get the "unlimited" testing may not have been the best
solution; but, this is just as stupid, if not more so!!
It's a good thing it's not Ferrari, otherwise all we'd be hearing
about is how Ferrari "cheated" their way to the titles!!!!!!!!!
My apologies for not being clearer!!
I meant is that "another" thing that di Montezemolo has been vocal about.
((The other being testing...))
If it had been Ferrari that showed up with the best Power Unit, there would
be yet another chorus of how Ferrari got the rules changed in their favour
and how they've cheated yet again...
((Hoping that's clearer??))
Looking for the quote, but the team has now stated that nothing will be worked on for the rest of this year unless it will benefit next years car. A sensible move really.
See our F1 related articles too!