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By Roth
#409976
Also his legend will be mightly boosted by a hard fought battle and will elevate his 2 WDCs with 2 teams above Sebs uncontested 4 and Alonsos uncontested 2

And best of all, everyone expecting/hoping he gets beaten by their fave Nico, will have burnt the bridges to use the detraction of 'he had the best car, my mom coulda won in that car'

And of course there is next year to come, hopefully with another team closer enough to widen the difference between the two.

Sennas legend is largely due to showing on track how musch faster than Prost he was despite Prost beating him one year and running his close the other mostly due to dnfs etc

As the wise boxing promoter said to the hot shot boxer - 'son, dont tell me what you won, tell me who you beat'


I said something to this end somewhere else. It's a battle worthy of a championship. If the second half of the season pans out in a similar vein to the first, it would have been more greatly deserved by Hamilton than Nico.

And whilst you're mentioning Senna there's something he said in 1990 which rings true with me should Nico win:

"In each year every sport has its champion. But the champion is not always real, respected and admired, acknowledged by everybody. On the contrary: often the champion is a champion without victories, without merit and fight. Look, if a team like McLaren dominates the World Championship then only two drivers have a chance for victory. But victory is worth a lot more if you achieve that by your own strenght, not because others made mistakes – because your opponents crashed or something. I like to take my wins in the former method, I consider only that as a real victory."

So he's saying championships can be won by more than one route, and depending on that route, that's how we should judge it, not just facts and figures. I also think legacies are built over a career, and that we may come to see Hamilton like Moss or Mansell, great drivers who for whatever reason didn't clinch the titles they deserved, rather than lesser ranked simply because they have less crowns than Vettel or Piquet.

So, WB, as an add-on to that, (and I know you didn't address me directly* but your snipes seem to follow cookie's posts around like a bad smell. If it's not me you're addresing, it's invisible ghosts, so you're then just chiming in with a pointless point) this is how I will see things, in an adult like context. I see the big picture of Hamilton's talent. I've never said I didn't support him or I'm here to bring him down. If he wins, like when Mansell won, it will be for all the previous near misses as much as for this season. He's owed one, but it doesn't work like that unfortunately. And if he misses out by a whisker it won't be too much of a stretch to say where he fell down and it wasn't all bad luck. I just call it as I see it, someone who has followed the sport long enough, and garnered enough knowledge not be dictated to on whether I'm right or wrong with people who see the world diifferently.

* i re-read WB's post and you were talking about me, sorry, just not to me, like if you use a different personal pronoun I won't notice you're still talking to me. It's like pretending I'm not in the room when I am. Have you seen somebody do that in real life? Not a good look.
Last edited by Roth on 26 Jul 14, 02:24, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
By Roth
#409982
again roth, like i said before its not about you per se, Its just that your committed, bright and interesting posts have become the standard to represent the group of posters who lay into Lewis on things that can be easily countered because they are not anchored to specific facts, more a generalised 'impression' or 'feeling'
The Lewis is good BUT brigade. This however doesnt mean that I think you are a card carrying member of that group, as you are less a hit and run bandit and more someone with real opinions but with confused delivery mechanism
So you set the standard without meaning to, possibly :thumbup:


I get the feeling we're forever going to be at loggerheads. Or rather you're never going to accept my opinion on matters like this. You're a methodical facts and figures, logical endgame kind of guy, and my points don't fit that mould. But you still judge them on that basis. I'm concerned with what's going on in his head when i talk about the yips and the raggedness. It's an inexact science, prone to conjecture, which you don't much like. But the brain for all it's marvelousness is a complex beast, and it's not always our best friend, sometimes turning on us when we need it most. You can't quantify it on a calculator.
User avatar
By Roth
#409991
I did a bit of Googling and came up with these two articles about psychology in F1.

They're quite lengthy but explain much better than I can why F1 isn't just a track game. It's a head game also and how that comes into play.

There's even a bit of Button ammo in the first one for you, cookie, which I think you'll appreciate.

http://formula1.about.com/od/drivers/a/ ... -Title.htm

http://www.thesportinmind.com/articles/ ... and-death/

I also discovered Hamilton isn't using Mercs newly enlisted psychologist, Dr Ceri Evans, because he believes he's never needed one so "if it ain't broke, don't fix it".

It's interesting though that, atleast until 2007, he used a sports psychologist, Dr Kerry Spackman, but apparently that was more for brain training, a pre-race preparation thing, increasing muscle power, than a reflective post race analysis thing.

There's a couple of pieces on him and Hamilton.

http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2007/m ... orts.sport

http://www.888.com/news/magazine/lewis-hamilton.htm
#409996
Yes I've said somewhere over the last few weeks that Lewis won't use a psychologist. I think I read it In an Autosport article. And the author of the article was a psychologist , still offering his services to Lewis should he want them.

Not had time to read your links yet, will do so this morning. I liked the quote you posted from Senna. It's very much how Lewis looks at things. He said after Germany , I want to win on merit not on good luck, but I could do with the bad luck stopping.
User avatar
By sagi58
#410005
I did a bit of Googling and came up with these two articles about psychology in F1.

They're quite lengthy but explain much better than I can why F1 isn't just a track game. It's a head game also and how that comes into play.

There's even a bit of Button ammo in the first one for you, cookie, which I think you'll appreciate.

http://formula1.about.com/od/drivers/a/ ... -Title.htm

http://www.thesportinmind.com/articles/ ... and-death/

I also discovered Hamilton isn't using Mercs newly enlisted psychologist, Dr Ceri Evans, because he believes he's never needed one so "if it ain't broke, don't fix it".

It's interesting though that, atleast until 2007, he used a sports psychologist, Dr Kerry Spackman, but apparently that was more for brain training, a pre-race preparation thing, increasing muscle power, than a reflective post race analysis thing.

There's a couple of pieces on him and Hamilton.

http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2007/m ... orts.sport

http://www.888.com/news/magazine/lewis-hamilton.htm

:clap: Fascinating reads!! :clap: Every one of them!! :clap:
Thank you!! :clap:
#410028
And whilst you're mentioning Senna there's something he said in 1990 which rings true with me should Nico win:

"In each year every sport has its champion. But the champion is not always real, respected and admired, acknowledged by everybody. On the contrary: often the champion is a champion without victories, without merit and fight. Look, if a team like McLaren dominates the World Championship then only two drivers have a chance for victory. But victory is worth a lot more if you achieve that by your own strenght, not because others made mistakes – because your opponents crashed or something. I like to take my wins in the former method, I consider only that as a real victory."


There are several parallels between Sennas mindset and results and Lewis'. Senna was beaten by his slower teammate, when he could have possibly compromised more with the win or nothing approach. Would you have said Senna had a mental weakness? In the season he departed this mortal coil, he hadnt scored a point in the first couple of races despite qualifying first, would you have said this was a mental weakness caused by the pressure of MS suing illegal traction control on his car - Senna mentioned it a few times and actuall stood by the track to listen to Ms' car.
Maybe we should just keep Senna out of this if we are not prepared to do a proper comparitive analysis

I did a bit of Googling and came up with these two articles about psychology in F1.

They're quite lengthy but explain much better than I can why F1 isn't just a track game. It's a head game also and how that comes into play.


Thanks for the links, I am sure some will read them and applaud you without actually understanding the articles or their relevance to your point. However I read the first one and am even more confused than before about your point.
The article talks about how pressure can distort the mental process of the leading driver who is expected to win - i.e stress is not good, glad that is cleared up. It then gives some examples about leading drivers who succumbed to this stress and saw a collapse in form and lots of mistakes - such as Button and MS.
However when it mentions Lewis, it cites the '""mistakes"" apparently brought on by this stress that ""allowed"" Kimi to catch up and win over the last 2 races as China and Brazil
China - the team made a mistake and left him out on bald tyres despite the rookie requesting a pit stop several times - Now I have heard several haterz blame Lewis for this because 'he should have ignored the team and pitted anyway'
Brazil - qualified well started well, then a mysterious gearbox glitch that dropped him exactly out of the points required to win the title - Again the haterz usually claim, he pressed the wrong buttons or was too aggressive with his gearbox in the parade lap etc etc

So roth, your article says leading drivers have stress that causes them to make mistakes, and gives us the facts for button and MS, yet is demonstrably WRONG to about Hamilton, yet you have never mentioned mental weaknesses for button or MS and even now are wheeling out this psychobabble mumbo jumbo to continue to justify your claim that Lewis has a unique flavour of ""mental weakness""

You are gonna have to retract or clarify the 'mental weakness' prognosis for his performance this season before I can go any further
#410029
Your article point out how pressure can cause stress that can cause mistakes - in everyone

everyone has the potential for mental weakness then

yet your point was that Lewis has a mental weakness that has plagued his career and manifests as bad luck

and you are surprised when I refer to this as an example of how he has been castigated throughout his career for things other drivers are not?
User avatar
By Roth
#410085
There are several parallels between Sennas mindset and results and Lewis'. Senna was beaten by his slower teammate, when he could have possibly compromised more with the win or nothing approach. Would you have said Senna had a mental weakness? In the season he departed this mortal coil, he hadnt scored a point in the first couple of races despite qualifying first, would you have said this was a mental weakness caused by the pressure of MS suing illegal traction control on his car - Senna mentioned it a few times and actuall stood by the track to listen to Ms' car.
Maybe we should just keep Senna out of this if we are not prepared to do a proper comparitive analysis


Or we could keep Senna out of it because he had two DNFs prior to Imola, which brings your point to a grinding halt.

Thanks for the links, I am sure some will read them and applaud you without actually understanding the articles or their relevance to your point. However I read the first one and am even more confused than before about your point.
The article talks about how pressure can distort the mental process of the leading driver who is expected to win - i.e stress is not good, glad that is cleared up. It then gives some examples about leading drivers who succumbed to this stress and saw a collapse in form and lots of mistakes - such as Button and MS.
However when it mentions Lewis, it cites the '""mistakes"" apparently brought on by this stress that ""allowed"" Kimi to catch up and win over the last 2 races as China and Brazil
China - the team made a mistake and left him out on bald tyres despite the rookie requesting a pit stop several times - Now I have heard several haterz blame Lewis for this because 'he should have ignored the team and pitted anyway'
Brazil - qualified well started well, then a mysterious gearbox glitch that dropped him exactly out of the points required to win the title - Again the haterz usually claim, he pressed the wrong buttons or was too aggressive with his gearbox in the parade lap etc etc


The first article says "might have been the case for Hamilton in 2007". You're dropping an important word again. For a man so meticulous in his thought process you're very clumsy holding onto particulars.

If you're happy to dismiss the articles over a minor point that's fine by me. For some strange reason I knew you'd find a loop hole, and you did. Well done, Columbo.

So roth, your article says leading drivers have stress that causes them to make mistakes, and gives us the facts for button and MS, yet is demonstrably WRONG to about Hamilton, yet you have never mentioned mental weaknesses for button or MS and even now are wheeling out this psychobabble mumbo jumbo to continue to justify your claim that Lewis has a unique flavour of ""mental weakness""

You are gonna have to retract or clarify the 'mental weakness' prognosis for his performance this season before I can go any further


If you're going to use a term like 'psychobabble mumbo jumbo' you're not doing yourself any favours. I could pull a cookie and say, 'How do you know I've never mentioned mental weaknesses for button and ms? i'll give you odds of five gajillion to one paid in red buttons if you can't find anything.' But you know that would be evading the point. It's a little trick of yours, and you know there's a term for it. And once it's recognised it makes about 97.2% of your rants meaningless. The article brought up MS and button, not me. They are called high profile examples. It's an article on F1 so they use relevant names. It's called journalism.

Look if you think it's a lot of nonsense, fair enough, but do we have to go through the histrionics to get there?
User avatar
By Roth
#410087
Your article point out how pressure can cause stress that can cause mistakes - in everyone

everyone has the potential for mental weakness then

yet your point was that Lewis has a mental weakness that has plagued his career and manifests as bad luck

and you are surprised when I refer to this as an example of how he has been castigated throughout his career for things other drivers are not?


Doesn't mean it's not true though, just he's the unfortunate one who cops it in the neck. The perils of charisma.
#410089
Roth, it's transparent crap that like I've mentioned, we've seen countless times before. You're just sugar coating it. Mental stress come in when your team gives you four mechanical catastrophes that take points away or leave you with a DNF, how would Rosberg's mental capacity be be holding up if he'd had those? Where as the only DNF he's suffered caused him to turn a 29 point lead into a four pout lead?

It's psychobabble and again, I've yet to see you apply it to anyone else on the grid except the guy you claim to "support". Jesus. :rolleyes:
#410093
@roth

Senna had 2 dnfs, has Lewis not had similar problems? You forgot the part about obsessing with ms' cheating traction control :wavey:

One point in one article? No your whole premise for digging up the articles was to show you are not completely batty by mentioning mental weakness because these experts agree that it can and has afflicted drivers expected to win
The fact that the article then gets it completely wrong in Lewis' case like a lot of ignorant haterz do - he didn't drop the last 2 races due to error brought by stress, it was not his fault - this for me renders your new tactic just another 'flanking maouvere ' to avoid the actual conflict point and spread around it.

So it's no longer about you claiming categorically that Lewis has a mental weakness that has been there through his career and is mistaken for bad luck? It's now about if it's possible that F1 drivers in general can be afflicted by stress as a result of extra pressure?

And you say this article expresses what you mean? The article says drivers leading can get stress and make mistakes, this expresses your claim that Lewis has mental weakness thru his career manifesting as bad luck?

Everytime you are asked about other drivers you hit the flanks, would you say button, Seb, Alonso, have permanent mental weakness like Lewis? Yes or no, stop running around and stand by you opinion, don't change focus or run away, answer the question

Let me help you - according to you, the article that expresses your opinion in a better way, says stress causes mistakes, all these drivers have shown high levels of stress and 'rattledness' during many races, no less than Lewis, are they also suffering mental weakness like Lewis

Yes or no
User avatar
By Roth
#410096
Roth, it's transparent crap that like I've mentioned, we've seen countless times before. You're just sugar coating it. Mental stress come in when your team gives you four mechanical catastrophes that take points away or leave you with a DNF, how would Rosberg's mental capacity be be holding up if he'd had those? Where as the only DNF he's suffered caused him to turn a 29 point lead into a four pout lead?

It's psychobabble and again, I've yet seen you apply it to anyone else on the grid except the guy you claim to "support". Jesus. :rolleyes:


I know. Imagine if I'd written about another driver in such a highly incendiary way such as this.

GB "Not a track Nico or Hamilton's been particularly successful on. Neither has the advantage. Here's hoping Hamilton doesn't shoot himself in the foot yet again. It's becoming the defining trait of the season so far."

Germany "Hamilton drove well today but not great. Coming through the field he looked a bit too eager to overtake, rather than let his natural skill and car's advantage do the work. He reminded me of Vettel coming from the back, a bit ragged and desparate at times which isn't what you would expect".

I think I was on crack when I posted these.

Just to clarify for those arriving late, these are my two remarks from the last two GP threads that started what I like to call a s**tstorm.
#410098
No... what started the :shtstorm: is claiming that Lewis was mentally weaker than his team mate and has always suffered from that weakness directly impacting his results over the years.
User avatar
By Roth
#410100
@roth

Senna had 2 dnfs, has Lewis not had similar problems? You forgot the part about obsessing with ms' cheating traction control :wavey:

One point in one article? No your whole premise for digging up the articles was to show you are not completely batty by mentioning mental weakness because these experts agree that it can and has afflicted drivers expected to win
The fact that the article then gets it completely wrong in Lewis' case like a lot of ignorant haterz do - he didn't drop the last 2 races due to error brought by stress, it was not his fault - this for me renders your new tactic just another 'flanking maouvere ' to avoid the actual conflict point and spread around it.

So it's no longer about you claiming categorically that Lewis has a mental weakness that has been there through his career and is mistaken for bad luck? It's now about if it's possible that F1 drivers in general can be afflicted by stress as a result of extra pressure?

And you say this article expresses what you mean? The article says drivers leading can get stress and make mistakes, this expresses your claim that Lewis has mental weakness thru his career manifesting as bad luck?

Everytime you are asked about other drivers you hit the flanks, would you say button, Seb, Alonso, have permanent mental weakness like Lewis? Yes or no, stop running around and stand by you opinion, don't change focus or run away, answer the question

Let me help you - according to you, the article that expresses your opinion in a better way, says stress causes mistakes, all these drivers have shown high levels of stress and 'rattledness' during many races, no less than Lewis, are they also suffering mental weakness like Lewis

Yes or no


This is that thing I was talking about again. It's either learned or natural, I don't know. It's done to direct the conversation away from the point we are making to something else because you don't like me padding back your posts. If all your post didn't have the same basic fault, I wouldn't keep doing this is and annoying the cr*p out of you. It's done to make me look bad but for anyone with any sense it's a lot of blathering from your side, filled with irrelevant fun facts and figures to impress the people in the cheap seats.
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