Showing posts with label Alonso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alonso. Show all posts

WHAT TO WATCH FOR IN 2021

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Sebastian Vettel and Aston Martin

Never have I seen so many F1 fans so eager and hopeful to see Vettel return to glory or at least contention. The pendulum has swung back from those, rightfully criticizing Seb for some amateur spins and costly rookie errors, to a wave of support based largely on an unfairness and locking of antlers between the four time WC and the corporate Ferrari mindset. Ironically though, Vettel now finds himself in the identical position of bringing former glory to a historic name. The difference this time is Lawrence Stroll’s coup here of buying Vettel’s experience, both for aiding his son Lance and for the “new” team. If Aston Martin do what Ferrari failed to do, which was listen and implement Vettel’s wisdom, then Seb himself is in a very good position to grow a supportive team, and pick up his career once again in what was a very competitive car in 2020. 


Sergio Perez and Red Bull


I would’ve said this was a do or die year for Sergio until a few weeks ago. Albon hasn’t made any lateral movement in motorsports like Magnussen and Grosjean have, and Alex never looks too worried or critical about it making me wonder whether his association with RB is truly over. Unfortunately where Albon failed, wasn’t in failing to win races for RB, but he floundered in placing a capable car in the points for the constructors fight, aka money. You can’t run at the top without putting two cars consistently into the points. It was within reason, with the Gasly/Kyvat/Marko disasters, to believe Red Bull have learned their lesson and kept Albon on a return waiver, giving Perez one year to show his value but then something happened to change my mind about that idea. Red Bull announced their commitment to the IP takeover for Honda’s Formula One engine in 2022. Even though the foundation is established, It takes a lot of money to persevere as a manufacturer and Perez comes with financial security in sponsors, which may secure his seat, regardless of performance in 2021.


Covid ... Again


The Covid crisis produced some unequalled unknowns in Formula One for the 2020 season. Schedule changes were very fluid, throwing chaos into the itinerary. Circuit cancellations meant old school track replacements, made challenging for teams and drivers, as they were anything but the sterile tracks designed for modern cars. Interruptive travel restrictions put pressures on team strategy, parts travel and repair work. Positive Covid infection itself produced some disruptive driver and team member sit outs which may again appear in 2021. Although the thrill of this F1 period will take a step down, now that Formula One teams have experience and data gathered from last season, expect the unexpected to again interfere with team’s best made plans. Those that can adapt on the fly, produce and execute creative solutions, will again flourish and move up the ladder while others may be caught stumbling.


The New In-Team Rivalry


Pre-season smiles and hugs have the real potential to quickly sour as each driver bids to out perform their new teammate. There’s the most giddy teaming of Norris/Ricardo at McLaren. The eagerness to prove their value for Ferrari in both Sainz/LeClerc. The youthful pairing of the volatile Mazepin and heavily burdened Schumacher rookie team for Haas. The intense Red Bull pressures of established Max Ver Stappen versus the rising Sergio Perez. What appears to be the seriousness of the returning and the fittest ever, Alonso with a mediocre Ocon rebirthing Alpine. As each unfamiliar pairing tries to establish driver dominance, expect this 2021 shuffle to turn serious and some sober, on track sparring about to happen when the visors go down this year. 

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The Changing of the Guard - Money and Youth

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Formula One's staus quo, like many sports today, is in a transitional stage and it's "older" participants are trying to avoid the cross-hairs of surrender. Is thirty going to be the dividing line for drivers being put out to pasture?

This year, when Alonso was declared "lucky to be alive" in the aftermath of the opening Australian Grand Prix, a lot started being asked about the two time World Champion, now 35 years old. Was his instincts still sharp enough? Does he still have it in him to podium, let alone dodge the Grim Repear? Was that wipe-out an opportunity to bow out and retain his honor? Another World Champion reputation in good standing is Jenson Button, now 36 years old and is currently looking for a seat in a car that he would consider "competitive." Button, still believes there is another Championship within him, if he had the opportunity. William's Felipe Massa had many a championship in Formula Cheverlot, Formula Renault and Formula 3000 and posted second best in F1 in 2008. He's now 35 years old and racing a mundane mid-pack. Romain Grosjean, a mere 30 years old, will do his best to cling on to Haas as a last chance stepping stone to a seat with Ferrari. Speaking off, Kimi went from dodging a early season retirement bullet to re-signing with Ferrari, proving himself still competitive and putting many circling sharks deeper into hotter waters. That leaves the question that's going to be asked to these thirty somethings, retire or not retire?



A lot of the pressure of that question is no doubt due to the rapid fire success of Red Bull's wonder kid, Max Verstappen. Now legally old enough to both drive a street car and drink his winning sparkling wine, (don't you miss the podium's "and now the champaaaaaagne", now that Pernod moved to Formula Quiet? Sad.) Verstappen's doubt crushing results have put the spotlight firmly on the emerging drivers of today as everyone scrambles to promote the next best thing. The difference afforded the fight of the experienced versus the youngsters is where it can be afforded most, in the second tier teams. Mercedes-AGM has boosted both Pascal Wehrlein and newest teenager on spot, Esteban Ocon, leaping from DTM, into a valid seat. Soon we'll see if Ocon has what it takes in what surely is a trial by fire, the season's longest and challenging Circuit de Spa. Certainly not where most would want to start although it was good enough for Schumacher!

Ocon circumvents another way into a seat in Formula One nowadays and that's just buy it. We see a new trend, governments jumping off the map and into the limelight through advertising in global sports. As circuits of character and history spend some time holding your door open for spare Euros, Azerbaijan ponies up some oil money for a new race (and apparently into Europe?) Ryo Haryanto's paid for "first Indonesian driver in F1" claim to fame failed to sustain the rest of the 2016 season as the Indonesian government ran out of enough rupiahs to keep Manor in business.

So who's going to hold fort here? Do teams weigh the glory and winning cash with their expenditures or roll the dice with the future drivers of the sport? What about the proven, experience of (granted, expensive) champions now having to fight for their right to maintain track position, trying to stay in the new Formula One or will it be the next generation paying to get in? Right now it's Ocon's pick, #31, but who's number is up next?
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