I suspect this guy will be on a lot of people's lists at the half way point for a number of reasons, mostly because of his performance in terms of the back runners. The young Frenchman currently holds the highest place finish for the bottom two teams, which at the end of the season could help Marussia financially although as we've seen with Caterham for the past three seasons, they've done very little with it.
His pace and qualifying performances have all been superb for his position at the back. For a guy who missed out on the Force India seat, you can tell he feels truly blessed to be in the position he's in. To say Force India are kicking themselves would be wrong and untrue, but they certainly have to ask "what if?"
His P13 finish in Malaysia certainly took most my surprise, most of all Marussia's nearest competition over at Caterham. Marussia's MR02 is the first Marussia car to feature KERS, and it certainly does seem to have levelled out the playing field. If progress is to be measured against his team mates, Bianchi is beating Chilton comfortable, however Chiilton has accomplished a feat that only Kimi Raikkonen and Lewis Hamilton have achieved so far this season, finishing every single race and lap. With only two DNF's to his name, Bianchi doesn't have that much to improve on.
Force India will definitely be keeping an eye on their former test driver especially if Paul di Resta is to leave for pastures new, but they may find they have bigger names chasing the young star. As a member of the Ferrari Driver's Academy, Stefano Domenicali has been monitoring his progress ever since his testing days. It's maybe about time Ferrari had some young blood around the paddock, five years without title success is not the Ferrari way.
Good things can only come from Jules Bianchi's involvement in Formula 1. The sport can genuinely benefit from such a talented individual. It just goes to show, when given two cars of the same build and capabilities, a real racing driver is capable of more than a pay driver.
Bringing you the latest news and my own personal ground breaking opinion. Formula 1 as a fan sees it. Follow me on Twitter: @Houston60
Showing posts with label Max Chilton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Max Chilton. Show all posts
Thursday, 15 August 2013
Monday, 3 June 2013
The Story So Far... Part One
We're a good way through the season now and I think it's time to look at the progress of all the teams and drivers. I had promised to do a driver a day but that would have interrupted Canada which is shaping up to be the most exciting Grand Prix yet again.
Nobody could have guessed who would have won the first race, and no one could have predicted the controversy we have already faced. But we've had a new Monaco winner, progression from some teams and regression from others. Over the next few days I'll be taking a close look at each team and how they have performed so far. Please enjoy!
Marussia
Currently chilling above Caterham in the Constructors Championship which is their goal, I'd say their season is off to a blinder. KERS has appeared to boost their performance and the attitude around the team seems to be rather positive. Keep this up and good things will happen. The disappearance of the 10th place money prize could either make or break their existence in the future however.
Max Chilton
Like a typical pay-driver, he hasn't met the standard. I love the fact he's a Brit, however his performances compared to the rest of the back markers (especially when it comes to qualifying) is poor. I can see him getting better though as the season progresses. The boy will learn but unfortunately he'll always just be a cash flow to Marussia. When they no longer need it, he could find himself replaced.
Monaco proved a low point when he miscalculated the gap between him and Pastor Maldonado, resulting in a major collision. Regardless, Max achieved his best position (twice) and unlike the other three back runners, Max has finished every race so far.
Jules Bianchi
It nearly didn't come together for the young Frenchman! He was overlooked for the Force India seat after they elected to go for Adrian Sutil. In my eyes (and hopefully the masses) they made the wrong decision. This guy is quick. Pure speed and class. He relishes having an unheard of second chance and he is refusing to waste it.
Bianchi constantly out qualifies his team mate and his Caterham counterparts, and places his team in 10th place because of his P13 finish in Malaysia. The guy will not be at the back for long. Someone like Sauber who love young aces like this guy will want him. When Paul di Resta moves up the grid, Force India should definitely give Jules first preference.
What's even more promising is the fact he is a member of Ferrari's Driver Academy. Future World Champion?
Caterham
Despite having the nicest livery, I've been really disappointed. Caterham's goals just keep on getting bigger and bigger, but their achievements keep getting smaller and smaller.
It's not come together for them yet despite major updates in Spain. A huge design flaw is holding them back, and an inexperienced driver line-up isn't helping matters.

Charles Pic
Last year, I thought Pic's move from Marussia was a smart one. Little did I know Pic would take two steps back. I don't think he's driven badly, I think it's the car holding him back.
If Tony Fernandes would get serious about F1 and stop dicking about with ridiculous second rate soccer ball teams, then we might have Caterham spectacle to watch.
It's impossible to judge based on the awful performance of that CT03, but at least he's remained relatively incident free.
Giedo van der Garde
Not amused lad, not amused (said Nathan to VDG).
He's not impressed me one bit, in fact I think he is very dangerous. His ridiculous move in Bahrain on Jean-Eric Vergne resulted in him t-boning the Toro Rosso driver, this is on top of many instances of poor control and lack of mental confidence.
Why he's driving instead of Heikki Kovalainen I will never know. Caterham are probably trying to milk his cash and then bring the Flying Finn back. Anybody is better than this Dutch clown.
NOTE: I am a firm believer that both these teams are bluffing to prepare for next year. With a Russian Grand Prix due in 2014, the Sociologist in me is saying that Russian President Vlad. Putin will want a Russian driver on the grid (Vitaly Petrov).
Williams
To say they have gone backwards is fair in many respects, but bare in mind, the blocks to the bright future for Williams are there. I've discovered them here.
The best thing they could have done was deport that useless waste of space [Bruno] Senna out of the sport, and thank Christ they did.
Pastor Maldonado
The Pastor Disaster that we seen in the early stages of last season seemed to have disappeared towards the end, and his no incident streak has continued since. The big accident in Monaco wasn't his fault and he has seemed to calm down overall as a driver.
However while cutting down the number of incidents, he has also cut down strong results. While not being helped by the abysmal form of the car, Maldonado failed to out qualify his rookie team mate for some time.
Pastor has failed to finish half the races and hasn't even looked like scoring a point. Constantly complaining about the car isn't going to help matters, but focusing on 2014 is key. Not that Maldonado is safe for next year...
Valtteri Bottas
Is his great form a surprise? Not to me. I called it well before the start that this guy would be an enigma and while not totally evident as of yet, signs and patterns are strongly emerging.
His results have been impeccable, winning the qualifying battle with Maldonado and coming close to scoring his maiden point in Malaysia have all shown signs of supreme driving talent.
It's a pity the only thing holding him back is a crap car. I really hope it doesn't dictate his 2014 drive. If it does, the sport will have passed up on a great star, and a definite future world champion.
Nobody could have guessed who would have won the first race, and no one could have predicted the controversy we have already faced. But we've had a new Monaco winner, progression from some teams and regression from others. Over the next few days I'll be taking a close look at each team and how they have performed so far. Please enjoy!
Marussia
Currently chilling above Caterham in the Constructors Championship which is their goal, I'd say their season is off to a blinder. KERS has appeared to boost their performance and the attitude around the team seems to be rather positive. Keep this up and good things will happen. The disappearance of the 10th place money prize could either make or break their existence in the future however.
Max Chilton
Like a typical pay-driver, he hasn't met the standard. I love the fact he's a Brit, however his performances compared to the rest of the back markers (especially when it comes to qualifying) is poor. I can see him getting better though as the season progresses. The boy will learn but unfortunately he'll always just be a cash flow to Marussia. When they no longer need it, he could find himself replaced.
Monaco proved a low point when he miscalculated the gap between him and Pastor Maldonado, resulting in a major collision. Regardless, Max achieved his best position (twice) and unlike the other three back runners, Max has finished every race so far.
Jules Bianchi
It nearly didn't come together for the young Frenchman! He was overlooked for the Force India seat after they elected to go for Adrian Sutil. In my eyes (and hopefully the masses) they made the wrong decision. This guy is quick. Pure speed and class. He relishes having an unheard of second chance and he is refusing to waste it.
Bianchi constantly out qualifies his team mate and his Caterham counterparts, and places his team in 10th place because of his P13 finish in Malaysia. The guy will not be at the back for long. Someone like Sauber who love young aces like this guy will want him. When Paul di Resta moves up the grid, Force India should definitely give Jules first preference.
What's even more promising is the fact he is a member of Ferrari's Driver Academy. Future World Champion?
Caterham
Despite having the nicest livery, I've been really disappointed. Caterham's goals just keep on getting bigger and bigger, but their achievements keep getting smaller and smaller.
It's not come together for them yet despite major updates in Spain. A huge design flaw is holding them back, and an inexperienced driver line-up isn't helping matters.

Charles Pic
Last year, I thought Pic's move from Marussia was a smart one. Little did I know Pic would take two steps back. I don't think he's driven badly, I think it's the car holding him back.
If Tony Fernandes would get serious about F1 and stop dicking about with ridiculous second rate soccer ball teams, then we might have Caterham spectacle to watch.
It's impossible to judge based on the awful performance of that CT03, but at least he's remained relatively incident free.
Giedo van der Garde
Not amused lad, not amused (said Nathan to VDG).
He's not impressed me one bit, in fact I think he is very dangerous. His ridiculous move in Bahrain on Jean-Eric Vergne resulted in him t-boning the Toro Rosso driver, this is on top of many instances of poor control and lack of mental confidence.
Why he's driving instead of Heikki Kovalainen I will never know. Caterham are probably trying to milk his cash and then bring the Flying Finn back. Anybody is better than this Dutch clown.
NOTE: I am a firm believer that both these teams are bluffing to prepare for next year. With a Russian Grand Prix due in 2014, the Sociologist in me is saying that Russian President Vlad. Putin will want a Russian driver on the grid (Vitaly Petrov).
Williams
To say they have gone backwards is fair in many respects, but bare in mind, the blocks to the bright future for Williams are there. I've discovered them here.
The best thing they could have done was deport that useless waste of space [Bruno] Senna out of the sport, and thank Christ they did.
Pastor Maldonado
The Pastor Disaster that we seen in the early stages of last season seemed to have disappeared towards the end, and his no incident streak has continued since. The big accident in Monaco wasn't his fault and he has seemed to calm down overall as a driver.
However while cutting down the number of incidents, he has also cut down strong results. While not being helped by the abysmal form of the car, Maldonado failed to out qualify his rookie team mate for some time.
Pastor has failed to finish half the races and hasn't even looked like scoring a point. Constantly complaining about the car isn't going to help matters, but focusing on 2014 is key. Not that Maldonado is safe for next year...
Valtteri Bottas
Is his great form a surprise? Not to me. I called it well before the start that this guy would be an enigma and while not totally evident as of yet, signs and patterns are strongly emerging.
His results have been impeccable, winning the qualifying battle with Maldonado and coming close to scoring his maiden point in Malaysia have all shown signs of supreme driving talent.
It's a pity the only thing holding him back is a crap car. I really hope it doesn't dictate his 2014 drive. If it does, the sport will have passed up on a great star, and a definite future world champion.
Labels:
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Thursday, 28 February 2013
Barcelona: Day One
Here we are. One step closer to the beginning of something very beautiful, the 2013 Formula 1 season. Barcelona hosts yet again another four days of testing, raising a couple of issues; will the rain play havoc once again? And will we see pace closer to the race pace we'll see in Australia? Fan favourites like Mark Webber, Lewis Hamilton, Sergio Perez and Felipe Massa are all in action today. Rookies Valtteri Bottas and Max Chilton were also piloting their Williams and Marussia's respectively. Chilton looks to be in the car for the whole four days unless Luiz Razia can get his sponsorship issue sorted.
Well... What can I really say? Other than, it looks as if we're in for another 2011. If you're unsure what that means, essentially it boils down to puppet boy getting controlled by the wonderful mind that is Adrian Newey. If you're unsure what THAT means, Sebastian Vettel will fly away to another title that someone has won for him. Red Bull's Mark Webber dominated the session by going 1.6s quicker than Lewis Hamilton in second place. That is an insane pace made on a drying track after rain hit the circuit all morning.
Final Standings
1. Mark Webber (Red Bull) 1:22.693s
2. Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) 1:24.348s
3. Jean-Eric Vergne (Toro Rosso) 1:25.017s
4. Valtteri Bottas (Williams) 1:26.458s
5. Sergio Perez (McLaren) 1:26.538s
6. Esteban Gutierrez (Sauber) 1:26.574s
7. Paul di Resta (Force India) 1:27.107s
8. Felipe Massa (Ferrari) 1:27.541s
9. Max Chilton (Marussia) 1:28.166s
10. Charles Pic (Caterham) 1:28.644s
11. Romain Grosjean (Lotus) 1:34.928s

The Toro Rosso of Jean-Eric Vergne and Williams of Valtteri Bottas enjoyed quick pace as did Sauber's Esteban Gutierrez who at one point had the quickest time. Max Chilton also continued Marussia's quicker pace over their rivals Caterham.
Felipe Massa had to end his day early after his Ferrari ran out of fuel on track. Reports are that this was deliberate and part of a data programme designed to read how the car reacts under dangerous amounts of low fuel. Going by earlier pace, Massa could have been closer to Webber if he had continued the session, this could contribute to the difference in speed. Another factor that reciprocates throughout every single session is that no one knows just how much fuel anybody has on board at one time, thus affecting the time sheets.
Lotus's misery continues for another day as Romain Grosjean drifted off the racing track. The E21's brilliance from Jerez seems nothing but a distant memory at this point for the fans.
Labels:
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Thursday, 14 February 2013
Jerez: Day Three
Day Three saw even more driver switches with some stepping into the car for the first time like, Kimi Raikkonen, Sebastian Vettel, Charles Pic, Jean-Eric Vergne and Valtteri Bottas. This was the biggest day for me as it saw The Iceman step into the E21 for the first time and I wasn't disappointed.
Final Standings
Final Standings
- Felipe Massa (Ferrari) 1m17.879s
- Nico Rosberg (Mercedes) 1m18.766s
- Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull) 1m19.052s
- Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus) 1m19.200s
- Jean-Eric Vergne (Toro Rosso) 1m19.247s
- James Rossiter (Force India) 1m19.303s
- Jenson Button (McLaren) 1m19.603s
- Esteban Gutierrez (Sauber) 1m19.934s
- Max Chilton (Marussia) 1m21.269s
- Valtteri Bottas (Williams) 1m21.575s
- Charles Pic (Caterham) 1m22.352s
- Paul di Resta (Force India) 1m23.729s
After a pretty quiet and bleak start to testing, Ferrari's Felipe Massa topped the time sheets, a stark contrast to this time last year for the team and the Tifosi.
This was a day of many positives for a lot of teams. Reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel managed to repeat the similar set times by his team mate in the days before him, showing just how consistent the RB9 is at this stage. Though be under no illusion I'm sure it'll be absolutely magnificent as Newey always makes it. So long as there's no repeat of 2011 we'll be fine. Max Chilton managed to beat Charles Pic in the battle of the back markers. The greatest achievement was Nico Rosberg finally getting a good lap out of the Mercedes to go second overall.
More disappointment for Jenson Button and McLaren as his time wasn't overly quick and he stopped towards the end of the session. Valtteri Bottas (who was the subject of my very first blog) was a bit of a disappointment for me, but a reminder here that Williams are running their 2012 car with 2013 livery and some 2013 parts. We will not see the full potential until Barcelona.
Thursday, 31 January 2013
McLaren MP4-28 + Various News

Lotus may have started off the car launches with the E21, but Woking based team McLaren hold the honour of starting off six consecutive days of car launches, a truly wonderful time for Formula 1 fans! I covered the launch live this morning and published a full report on Let's Talk F1. To see the new MP4-28 take a read by clicking here.

2014 Comeback For HRT (sort of)?
As the FIA published the 2013 season entries last November, Spanish outfit HRT were not included due to their financial instability and insecure future, thus only 11 teams will be appearing on the grid this season.
However, an American/Canadian company called Scorpion have been attempting a buyout bid in order to salvage an entry onto the grid. Bernie Ecclestone even gave a nod to the bid but the FIA ruled out any possibility this year as the deadline is long gone, stating they will not accept any specialist circumstances.
They shouldn't worry about pushing hard to get a 2013 slot because the regulations are more or less the same, meaning they would still be hopelessly uncompetitive. The best thing to do would be to develop a monster of a machine for the 2014 seismic shift in performance. They might even catch up with the rest of the pack!

Finally we have been guaranteed a German Grand Prix and will be returning to the wonderful Nurburgring!
Bernie Ecclestone has cast doubt over both the event and venue after the group who owns the circuit failed to raise the funds necessary. This means that we will most certainly have 19 races next season with the European venue still to be decided. Hopefully if anybody had any sense they'd be straight back to Hockenheim for both German tracks. That would be the definition of epic.
Time is Slowly Running Out
This is a message to Force India, Caterham and Marussia. It is time to get your finger out of your arses and get us a full driver line up. I'm sick to the death speculating, my #HireHeikki campaign has been working flat out (like 2 tweets every month, whatever), testing starts very soon and it's ridiculous how we don't know who's driving. I can't remember it every being this late!
The closest rumour I've heard yet is that Luiz Razia (pictured) has been linked to the Marussia seat but these are unconfirmed rumours and to be honest, I'd take Vitaly Petrov or dare I say it, Bruno Senna before another rookie.
Force India launch their car tomorrow, I would like to think they would have the common courtesy for us the fans and Paul di Resta to name a second driver. I even think I'd take back Adrian Sutil at this late stage.
Both Caterham and Marussia launch on the morning of the Jerez test on the 5th of February so at the end of the day, they have no choice but to name drivers soon.
This is however great for Max Chilton, Paul di Resta and Charles Pic as their team mates will be nothing more than a second thought, meaning the team will focus on them first.
Labels:
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Monday, 21 January 2013
Glock's Gone!
UPDATE:
It appears Glock has turned towards the DTM driving for old F1 outfit BMW (ESPN). For those who are unaware, the DTM is the German version of touring cars and has had a number of former F1 stars such as David Coulthard and Ralf Schumacher.
I will personally miss him but since I have access to the DTM I am still excited to see him race and I'd like to wish him the best of luck!
It appears Glock has turned towards the DTM driving for old F1 outfit BMW (ESPN). For those who are unaware, the DTM is the German version of touring cars and has had a number of former F1 stars such as David Coulthard and Ralf Schumacher.
I will personally miss him but since I have access to the DTM I am still excited to see him race and I'd like to wish him the best of luck!
Friday, 21 December 2012
Taking a Pic at Caterham
Charles Pic apparently had a stormer of a rookie season in 2012 and has been awarded a move to Caterham. The first pictures of the young Frenchman have emerged with him spending a few weeks at the teams HQ in Leafield, in an interesting Q&A session here.
I say apparently because, I don't pay a lot of attention to the back runners. I did a little bit in their first year because it was exciting to see new teams, but after the repetition of Q1 fallouts, I got bored. From what I did recall, he impacted very little. Paired up with Timo Glock at Marussia, you're going to look like a second rate driver. He never wowed me and rarely out performed Glock.
The reason given by Caterham was that Pic's performances were enough to reward him with a seat for next season. I think it was based on a lot more than that.
Marussia have confirmed their driver line-up for next season which will consist of the ever impressive Glock and the new kid on the block, Max Chilton. Chilton who despite not winning the GP2 series impressed with a 4th place finish in the championship and two wins at Hungary and Singapore. Coupled with financial backing a move up was almost a certainty. The decision to sign for Caterham was maybe a decision made on long term thinking.
What's confusing to me is the strides Marussia have took recently in terms of development and pace. The gap to Caterham closed significantly this season which for competitiveness sake is always a bonus. This progression can only carry on and who knows, maybe Marussia could have overhauled Caterham this coming season? Chilton's move up was almost a certainty, but not for definite. He could have held on to his seat and helped Marussia overtake Caterham. My point is if Chilton is more beneficial to the team in terms of R&D, and Glock leads them in the right direction, Pic could be left with egg on his face.
The scenario however could work visa versa. If Pic is everything he's cracked up to be, he could be the element Caterham need to make it into the points. In the last race of the season, Petrov managed an 11th place which was the highest by any of the three slower teams to date and enough to secure that all important 10th place in the constructors championship. This could be the season where they compete with the Toro Rosso's! The all important factor is Pic's team mate. Caterham have yet to confirm their complete driver line up for next season. And with only a seat left at Force India, options are running thin for drivers. A move to Caterham for a driver who has not ran in a back runner is a career killer for sure. That's why it is essential to bag the one man on the grip who has shown nearly as much consistency as Kimi Raikkonen.
I am of course taking about Heikki Kovalainen. As I've said in various blogs before, Heikki for his contributions to Caterham deserves a a quicker drive. But with everything except the Force India gig gone, it looks like Caterham is his only option. Even that may be out of reach with gossip suggesting Caterham are going for money over talent and selecting Vitaly Petrov. This would be an extremely detrimental move for Caterham because neither Petrov nor Pic can provide the team with that essential leadership quality.
Pic's arrival may only boost Caterham's campaign for a point. But he is not enough. Caterham need Kovalainen to help keep the momentum going. He has enough experience, but not as much as Pic's previous team mate Glock. This can help Pic grow as a driver out of the shadows and into his own personality.
I really don't know what to make of the move. All I know is, we probably won't notice. At the end of the day it could take a decade of being in the sport for either of the teams to make a difference. Maybe Pic can be around to provide the stars of that time with experience, but as per usual, I am not expecting much and neither should you.
I say apparently because, I don't pay a lot of attention to the back runners. I did a little bit in their first year because it was exciting to see new teams, but after the repetition of Q1 fallouts, I got bored. From what I did recall, he impacted very little. Paired up with Timo Glock at Marussia, you're going to look like a second rate driver. He never wowed me and rarely out performed Glock.
The reason given by Caterham was that Pic's performances were enough to reward him with a seat for next season. I think it was based on a lot more than that.
Marussia have confirmed their driver line-up for next season which will consist of the ever impressive Glock and the new kid on the block, Max Chilton. Chilton who despite not winning the GP2 series impressed with a 4th place finish in the championship and two wins at Hungary and Singapore. Coupled with financial backing a move up was almost a certainty. The decision to sign for Caterham was maybe a decision made on long term thinking.
What's confusing to me is the strides Marussia have took recently in terms of development and pace. The gap to Caterham closed significantly this season which for competitiveness sake is always a bonus. This progression can only carry on and who knows, maybe Marussia could have overhauled Caterham this coming season? Chilton's move up was almost a certainty, but not for definite. He could have held on to his seat and helped Marussia overtake Caterham. My point is if Chilton is more beneficial to the team in terms of R&D, and Glock leads them in the right direction, Pic could be left with egg on his face.
The scenario however could work visa versa. If Pic is everything he's cracked up to be, he could be the element Caterham need to make it into the points. In the last race of the season, Petrov managed an 11th place which was the highest by any of the three slower teams to date and enough to secure that all important 10th place in the constructors championship. This could be the season where they compete with the Toro Rosso's! The all important factor is Pic's team mate. Caterham have yet to confirm their complete driver line up for next season. And with only a seat left at Force India, options are running thin for drivers. A move to Caterham for a driver who has not ran in a back runner is a career killer for sure. That's why it is essential to bag the one man on the grip who has shown nearly as much consistency as Kimi Raikkonen.
I am of course taking about Heikki Kovalainen. As I've said in various blogs before, Heikki for his contributions to Caterham deserves a a quicker drive. But with everything except the Force India gig gone, it looks like Caterham is his only option. Even that may be out of reach with gossip suggesting Caterham are going for money over talent and selecting Vitaly Petrov. This would be an extremely detrimental move for Caterham because neither Petrov nor Pic can provide the team with that essential leadership quality.
Pic's arrival may only boost Caterham's campaign for a point. But he is not enough. Caterham need Kovalainen to help keep the momentum going. He has enough experience, but not as much as Pic's previous team mate Glock. This can help Pic grow as a driver out of the shadows and into his own personality.
I really don't know what to make of the move. All I know is, we probably won't notice. At the end of the day it could take a decade of being in the sport for either of the teams to make a difference. Maybe Pic can be around to provide the stars of that time with experience, but as per usual, I am not expecting much and neither should you.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
Lotus Don't Know What They're Doing!
Post on Grosjean retaining his drive, Max Chilton becoming the 4th Brit on the grid, Kobayashi's premature departure and a possible convict on the grid?!
Lotus today published a statement saying Romain Grosjean has been resigned for next season. This photo will prove otherwise:
As you can see, it is noneother than myself driving along side the Kimster next season. Nonetheless, I'll write the blog just as if Goujon (it's funny because he's french) was for driving.
Grosjean to stay at Lotus.
It's the wrong decision. No point of sugar coating it. Aside from all the early race incidents and the attempt on Fernando Alonso's life, Goujon is not a great driver. In fact he's average at best capable of one good over take a season. Of course when you're number 2 and let's be clear, he is a DEFINITE number 2 to Kimi Raikkonen, you're going to look just awful. Lotus have not only taken on a heavy damage bill for next season, but they've over looked so many better suited drivers. I've said it before, but Heikki Kovalainen deserved a step up. After carrying his team for three years he deserves to be set in some powerful machinery. Two Finn's would have been terrific as there is no doubt, they know how to win World Championships.
However it is not the worst thing in the world. They could have resigned Bruno Senna (reserve driver in 2011). Goujon may improve. And I do believe he's a very good provider of feedback for R&D so his intuition can provide Kimi with some top notch resources. Hopefully that is all Romain will be, a resource. Lotus know how to run a team, and they know as well as I do that Kimi is the undisputed number 1 driver. So long as Goujon knows his place, everything will run smoothly.
Fourth Brit Chilton.
21 year old Max Chilton has made the step up from reserve driver to a full time seat at Marussia following the departure of Charles Pic to Caterham. He is also British which makes me a very, very happy fan and I'll be supporting him throughout! Usually from all the back markers I supported Caterham just for the funsies, but now I have a genuine reason to support Marussia.
I do have one issue. The guy has never won a championship, and between Formula Three and GP2 he's only bagged three races. I know there's no chance of winning the title in a Marussia, but I have to question his speed and determination if this is all he can muster.
He could either be a world champion like Lewis Hamilton or Jenson Button. Or he may be more of a Paul di Resta character who only wants to win races.
Krazy Kob Krashes out of 2013 season.
Yep sadly Kamikaze Kobayashi will not be on our screens next season in a competitive car due to a lack of funding. He seems confident of a 2014 drive but despite fans setting up a donation site in order to provide funding, it wasn't enough. As previously stated in my debut blog, a seat in Formula 1 is mostly decided on by who can flash the most green. Kamui just didn't have the backing for it.
It's not hard to see why. His Sauber partner Sergio Perez stole the spotlight with an absolute wonder season. This was enough to secure a seat at McLaren, but this was also aided by backing from Mexico. Yep, like Maldonado and Valenzuela, the actual country of Mexico funds Perez through Telmex. Why does this matter to Kobayashi? Well unfortunately for him, Sauber's reserve driver, Esteban Gutierrez is funded by the exact same company effectively filling Kobayashi's seat as Perez was replaced by Nico Hulkenberg who also had a storm of a season.
I am quite proud of Kamui because he is not settling for anything less than a Sauber. And I believe he may have actually left at a good time. Sauber tend to have one good season followed by a mirage of bad seasons. However this may change under the control of Monisha Kaltenborn.
The grid has lost a great talent for next season, I can't see it being the same without him. But there may be a spot open for him midway through the season where he could just slot right in. It's about keeping his fitness to a maximum and more importantly keeping his health in check.
Thug Life.
Despite what he says, there is no guarantee he will actually be back. It's looking more and more likely and with certain tragedies like Grosjean staying and Kobayashi leaving I think the F1 gods still would like to punish me by putting Sutil back on the grid. If he were to re-join Force India however, this could benefit our Paul as he was a far better drive than Sutil in 2011.
Force India needs somebody different than Sutil. If they are set on getting experience then they need too reward either Kovalinen or Glock with a more powerful racing car. Or to continue from where The Hulk left off, get a speed demon like Kobayashi in the chair.
The grid is definitely taking shape for next season. I look forward to hear more team announcements and gauging my opinions on them.
"Leave me alone, I know what I'm doing." - Kimi Raikkonen over the radio before winning the 2012 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.
Lotus today published a statement saying Romain Grosjean has been resigned for next season. This photo will prove otherwise:
As you can see, it is noneother than myself driving along side the Kimster next season. Nonetheless, I'll write the blog just as if Goujon (it's funny because he's french) was for driving.
Grosjean to stay at Lotus.
It's the wrong decision. No point of sugar coating it. Aside from all the early race incidents and the attempt on Fernando Alonso's life, Goujon is not a great driver. In fact he's average at best capable of one good over take a season. Of course when you're number 2 and let's be clear, he is a DEFINITE number 2 to Kimi Raikkonen, you're going to look just awful. Lotus have not only taken on a heavy damage bill for next season, but they've over looked so many better suited drivers. I've said it before, but Heikki Kovalainen deserved a step up. After carrying his team for three years he deserves to be set in some powerful machinery. Two Finn's would have been terrific as there is no doubt, they know how to win World Championships.
However it is not the worst thing in the world. They could have resigned Bruno Senna (reserve driver in 2011). Goujon may improve. And I do believe he's a very good provider of feedback for R&D so his intuition can provide Kimi with some top notch resources. Hopefully that is all Romain will be, a resource. Lotus know how to run a team, and they know as well as I do that Kimi is the undisputed number 1 driver. So long as Goujon knows his place, everything will run smoothly.
Fourth Brit Chilton.
21 year old Max Chilton has made the step up from reserve driver to a full time seat at Marussia following the departure of Charles Pic to Caterham. He is also British which makes me a very, very happy fan and I'll be supporting him throughout! Usually from all the back markers I supported Caterham just for the funsies, but now I have a genuine reason to support Marussia.
I do have one issue. The guy has never won a championship, and between Formula Three and GP2 he's only bagged three races. I know there's no chance of winning the title in a Marussia, but I have to question his speed and determination if this is all he can muster.
He could either be a world champion like Lewis Hamilton or Jenson Button. Or he may be more of a Paul di Resta character who only wants to win races.
Krazy Kob Krashes out of 2013 season.
Yep sadly Kamikaze Kobayashi will not be on our screens next season in a competitive car due to a lack of funding. He seems confident of a 2014 drive but despite fans setting up a donation site in order to provide funding, it wasn't enough. As previously stated in my debut blog, a seat in Formula 1 is mostly decided on by who can flash the most green. Kamui just didn't have the backing for it.
It's not hard to see why. His Sauber partner Sergio Perez stole the spotlight with an absolute wonder season. This was enough to secure a seat at McLaren, but this was also aided by backing from Mexico. Yep, like Maldonado and Valenzuela, the actual country of Mexico funds Perez through Telmex. Why does this matter to Kobayashi? Well unfortunately for him, Sauber's reserve driver, Esteban Gutierrez is funded by the exact same company effectively filling Kobayashi's seat as Perez was replaced by Nico Hulkenberg who also had a storm of a season.
I am quite proud of Kamui because he is not settling for anything less than a Sauber. And I believe he may have actually left at a good time. Sauber tend to have one good season followed by a mirage of bad seasons. However this may change under the control of Monisha Kaltenborn.
The grid has lost a great talent for next season, I can't see it being the same without him. But there may be a spot open for him midway through the season where he could just slot right in. It's about keeping his fitness to a maximum and more importantly keeping his health in check.
Thug Life.
Despite what he says, there is no guarantee he will actually be back. It's looking more and more likely and with certain tragedies like Grosjean staying and Kobayashi leaving I think the F1 gods still would like to punish me by putting Sutil back on the grid. If he were to re-join Force India however, this could benefit our Paul as he was a far better drive than Sutil in 2011.
Force India needs somebody different than Sutil. If they are set on getting experience then they need too reward either Kovalinen or Glock with a more powerful racing car. Or to continue from where The Hulk left off, get a speed demon like Kobayashi in the chair.
The grid is definitely taking shape for next season. I look forward to hear more team announcements and gauging my opinions on them.
Labels:
Adrian Sutil,
Esteban Gutierrez,
F1,
Fernando Alonso,
Formula 1,
Heikki Kovalainen,
Kamui Kobayashi,
Kimi Raikkonen,
Lotus,
Marussia,
Max Chilton,
Nico Hulkenberg,
Romain Grosjean,
Sauber,
Sergio Perez
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