Oh, Mr. Horner, you didn't!
Christian came out with this latest bit:
"It's too out of kilter when you have five Mercedes cars in the top five," he said. "The immaturity of this technology is still quite raw and Mercedes shouldn't be afraid of competition. They're doing a super job, but I think it's healthy for Formula One that Ferrari, Honda and Renault have the ability to close that gap. Otherwise we are going to end up in a very stagnant position.
"It's a bigger issue than just what is right for the teams, it's about what's right for the sport and the fans. It's easy to take a self-interest position, but when you look at what the right thing is for Formula One, it's to have competition. The rules are the rules as they are at the moment, but I think we need to be big enough to say let's open it a little bit, be responsible on costs so that there is no impact for the customer teams, but have that competition."
Horner admits Mercedes has a much better package than Red Bull under the new regulations, but takes some encouragement from the way his team has bounced back after such a disastrous start.
"Mercedes has done the best job this year. All it does is motivate you, because you know how much hard work goes into winning a championship and to win it four times in a row [as Red Bull did from 2010-2013] is an enormous achievement.Read more at
http://en.espnf1.com/f1/motorsport/stor ... c504rJF.99So, if I'm to read into his diatribe a bit, the four straight years of Red Bull dominance did not fall under the "bigger interest" that is F1—"what's right for the sport and the fans." When they were saying, we, Red Bull, got the diffuser regs right and it's up to the other teams to smarten up to catch up for 4 years running, somehow that is acceptable. Mercedes are dominant for three quarters of a season and the world is not only not right but it's coming to a disastrous end. Frankly I could understand a gripe if this Mercedes AMG thing had been going on for years but less than a full season? Somehow he hasn't stirred up my sympathy well with his cries.
Horner mentioned having 5 Mercedes cars up front. Maybe he might want to re-direct his full attention to his engine partner. They played a big part in the Red Bull dynasty yet they too got it very wrong in 2014. And for this, all the Renault teams share in the suffrage. You can't hold any of this year's failures on Mercedes. Em, lest we forget, Mercedes too has suffered in performance. They too have lost points, race wins, etc. due to this new-tech formula. It's not all roses and frilly knickers there either.
Finally, I'd be remiss if I didn't speak to Horner's complete ignorance of what has made Mercedes so good this year. I think he may not be willing to accept that Mercedes also has the best chassis and mechanical grip. (The pilots are a bit handy too.) A clear comparison is the remaining 3 Mercedes-shad teams, all of whom Red Bull is currently beating in the WCC handily. They have their strengths and weaknesses...maybe aero, mechanical grip, fuel usage, drivers, engineering, etc. Horner's very first line would have us all convinced that all the Mercedes teams are flogging his outfit. The gentleman doth protest too much, methinks. The only odd man out in this conversation is Ferrari...and we need not get into their trials cuz their engine is actually a smaller part of their massive discontent.
I'm just saying...err, wait. Sorry.
Such fun!