F1 Fanatic guest writer Duncan Stephen, who writes Vee8, looks at how Indy Car drivers have fallen out of fashion in F1.
The departure of Sébastien Bourdais from Toro Rosso brings into focus two trends that have emerged in the driver market.
The first is the high turnover of drivers in the Red Bull teams, particularly Toro Rosso. This has been picked up elsewhere (including on F1 Fanatic and James Allen’s blog), so I will discuss it only briefly.
But another aspect has not been mentioned quite as much – the trend away from drivers who made their name in IndyCar.
Red Bull’s driver management
In its short history, Toro Rosso has built up a history of managing its drivers poorly. Since Toro Rosso’s first season in 2006, the team has gone through six different drivers. That is more than almost any other team, although McLaren has also gone through six in the past four years. The Woking-based squad has had some high profile driver management problems of its own in that period – first with Juan Pablo Montoya, then with Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton.
Back to Toro Rosso’s problems, the team’s management famously had a rift with Scott Speed in 2007 which ended in the driver accusing Toro Rosso boss Franz Tost of physically assaulting him. Needless to say, that was the end of his relationship with the team. Toro Rosso’s other driver at the time, Vitantonio Liuzzi, also ended up being disillusioned with the situation and has since cut his ties with Red Bull.
The parent Red Bull team has not had the most stable of situations with its drivers either. Its first season in 2005, also involving Liuzzi, was a disaster on this front. Although they had brought in veteran David Coulthard, who would serve as a stabilising influence and remains on the team’s books to this day, Red Bull intended to share their second seat between two drivers, Liuzzi and Christian Klien.
At first the promise was for the two Red Bull Junior Team graduates to be given roughly equal time in the race seat, with the drivers swapping places every few races. But this policy was quietly dropped after Liuzzi’s first four races, after which Klien became the permanent second driver.
Klien stayed on for the following season, but the relationship with Red Bull soon soured. Klien was not offered another year at Red Bull Racing, and was instead offered a drive at a Red Bull-backed ChampCar team. Klien baulked at this idea, and severed his ties with Red Bull, being replaced by Robert Doornbos for the remainder of the season. Following a stint at Honda, Klien is currently BMW’s reserve driver.
Red Bull heavily invests in young driver talent through its Red Bull Junior Team programme. This is the official explanation for Red Bull’s constantly changing driver line-up – it wants to give as many of its drivers a seat in F1 as possible.
This is supposed to be the raison d’?�?�tre of Toro Rosso – but cynics say it is there to share costs with the main Red Bull team. For instance, why did S?�?�bastien Bourdais – not a Red Bull Junior driver – got a race seat there? Moreover, neither of Red Bull’s longest-serving drivers, David Coulthard and Mark Webber, were nurtured by Red Bull.
Red Bull point to the success of Sebastian Vettel, saying that he is proof of the success of Red Bull’s approach towards driver development. But the fact is that BMW can have a better claim to having prepared Sebastian Vettel for F1. It was BMW who gave him his first test in a Williams-BMW, his prize for winning the German Formula BMW championship in 2004. He became BMW’s permanent test driver in 2006. It was BMW who gave him his first race drive, when he scored a point at Indianapolis in 2007.
Vettel is not the only BMW prot?�?�g?�?� either. Robert Kubica is another successful driver whose skills have been nurtured by BMW.
The tide against IndyCar drivers
The departure of S?�?�bastien Bourdais also brings up the question mark surrounding the skills of American open wheel racers. Once upon a time, it was common for IndyCar drivers to make the switch to Formula 1. In fact, almost 100 Champ Car drivers have had involvement in F1, and four Champ Car champions have also become Formula 1 World Champions. Keith wrote a wonderful series about drivers hopping over the pond last year.
But today, open wheel racing in America is a shadow of its former self. Particularly over the past decade or so, the quality has decreased dramatically. But question marks over the ability of Champ Car drivers have been around for even longer.
No driver has successfully made the leap to Formula 1 from Champ Car or IRL for over a decade. The last successful Champ Car driver to compete in F1 was Jacques Villeneuve. He won the World Championship in 1997, but few would say he was among the most deserving drivers to become a World Champion. From this point onwards, the ability of Champ Car drivers to join F1 fell rapidly.
The next driver to make the jump was Alessandro Zanardi, also with Williams. Zanardi had raced in F1 before, but with a string of poor teams – Jordan, Minardi and Lotus which by then was on its last legs. But he had a more successful time in Cart, winning two titles in 1997 and 1998. This was enough to convince Frank Williams to give him a three year contract. But his first season turned out to be a disaster.
Zanardi lacked the speed and failed to get to grips with the complexity of Formula 1 cars. Towards the end of the season he even ran with heavier steel brakes, saying that he preferred them to the more modern carbon brakes used by everyone else. After a year of rumours, Zanardi’s three year deal was cut short at the end of the season, having failed to score a point while his team mate Ralf Schumacher scored 35.
Despite this experience, Williams obviously did not clock onto the fact that Champ Car drivers were no longer up to scratch because the next driver to make the leap into F1 was 1999 CART champion Juan Pablo Montoya, once again with Williams. However, this relationship was much more successful than the one with Zanardi. Montoya even came relatively close to winning the Championship in 2003.
But despite gaining seven wins in F1, doubts about the Colombian’s abilities increased as his F1 career progressed. His relationship with Williams soured before his move to McLaren in 2005. While driving for McLaren, he failed to get on top of the handling of the car.
Meanwhile, doubts about his fitness were constantly raised. While at Williams, he gained a staggering 10 kilograms (over 1½ stone) in weight during the course of one season. He did not go up in many people’s estimations when he had to sit out two of his first races for McLaren following a “tennis accident” which is said to have actually been a quad bike accident.
That was the last time Williams dared hire a Champ Car driver, but other teams failed to take notice. Toyota signed Cristiano da Matta for the 2003 and 2004 seasons after winning the CART series in 2002. His first season was a relative success, but in 2004 his performances were anonymous and disappointing. He finished in the points just once all year, before being replaced by Ricardo Zonta mid-season. Afterwards, Da Matta bitterly vowed never to race in F1 again, complaining that there was too much emphasis on cars’ technology – another sign of Champ Car drivers’ inability to handle the more sophisticated F1 machinery.
Since then, Formula 1 teams have generally given Champ Car / IndyCar drivers a wide berth – until Toro Rosso signed S?�?�bastien Bourdais for the 2008 season. Bourdais’s record seemed impeccable though, winning an unprecedented four Champ Car championships in a row.
However, by this time US open wheel racing was a shadow of its former self. Bourdais disappointed in F1, failing to capitalise on the opportunities he was given, thoroughly outclassed by his team mate Sebastian Vettel, and even this year by rookie S?�?�bastien Buemi. On the BBC’s coverage, Force India’s Ian Phillips recently scoffed that the problem with Bourdais was that he was used to driving “lorries”.
This year’s IndyCar series increasingly under fire for being too processional and producing poor racing. The sanctioning body has drawn up plans for a “push to pass” system to be introduced mid-season in a desperate bid to spice up the series (which, on the strength of last weekend’s race, seems to have worked). Somehow I think Bourdais will be the last IndyCar driver to make the switch to F1 for quite a while.
Read more
- Sebastien Bourdais biography
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 1
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 2
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 3
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 4
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 5
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 6
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 7
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 8
- CART drivers who raced in F1: From Andretti to Zanardi part 9
Ronman
3rd August 2009, 8:04
Forgive my ignorance, but what is the fundamental difference between driving F1, and driving a CArt/Indi car whatever they acll them nowadays.
i wish they would put the two cars together on the same track so that we can see the difference between the 2 in speed and performance.
on the driver’s side of the story, i think the less professional aspect of the the American series, and the less glitz, because of a ton of races and a thousand teams makes the requirements on each driver less.
In F1, there’s so much money, exclusivity and fewer cars, that the quality of the drivers does really have to be top notch in order to shine.
or it just might be that the American series are more open to the driver’s whining, because that’s all i hear those drivers do when they get to F1. Even Jacques…
Ben Ell
3rd August 2009, 10:28
around Montreal F1 cars were about 6-7 seconds per lap faster than (at the time) CART.
Uppili
3rd August 2009, 21:36
Yet around Laguna Seca the Champ Car DP01’s were faster than a Toyota F1 car in the hands of a cetrain Sebastian Bourdais…..
Ben Ell
4th August 2009, 1:42
Bordais in a car he’s never driven before, on a demonstration run, on a track that car never vists and so doesn’t have any setup data whatsoever, and might be on hard demonstration tyres? Hardly a good basis for comparison. The Montreal times were taken from qualifying and races for each category.
The sri lankan
4th August 2009, 3:09
it was driven by christiano da matta and the Toyota was largely de-tuned because all the power was not needed. i read that somewhere in an official report. i guess its arrogance on Toyotas parts but in the hands of a capable driver, and that car on it’s full race trim setup will thrash the Panoz and many more to come. for gods sakes champ car has wowed over and over to take on f1 and they fell flat didint they?
dwp
6th August 2009, 1:26
Forget about the drivers, comparing CART cars to F1 cars is apples and oranges. Different brakes, tyres, engines, etc etc
Matt
3rd August 2009, 8:29
This writer is spouting rubbish. No one doubted Montoya was a top line driver while in F1. His wins were no fluke and by the end of 2005 he was able to beat Raikkonen a number of times in what was Kimi’s career season.
Kovy
3rd August 2009, 9:17
In 2005, Kimi won 7 races, Montoya 3.
Matt
3rd August 2009, 9:35
I know the stats.
First of all, this was by many accounts, Kimi’s best season in Formula One. The Kimi of 2005 would have destroyed the Kimi of 2007.
Secondly, Montoya didn’t really recover from his injury until about mid season. It wasn’t until Canada that Montoya finally started to match Raikkonen. Ofcourse by that point Montoya was out of the championship race and the team had to throw its support behind the Finn. This cost Montoya probably wins in Canada and Spa (would bring the count to 5-5).
Was Montoya’s time at McLaren a dissapointment for all concerned? Absolutely.
Was he a hack only in F1 because he won in Champcar? No way.
The author of this article would be wise to remember that Montoya was picked up by Williams and stashed in Champcar while they experimented with Button (whom still has less wins in F1 than Montoya).
I can’t remember if it was Frank or Patrick that saw Montoya put two wheels on the grass to overtake a driver in F3 on a wet track. That was what impressed them and got him a test in an F1 car, not Champcar.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 13:14
Matt – You said all that I had to say. The author hasn’t done enough research and randomly written the article based on superficial opinions of Self proclaimed “European(British) Pundits” who always run down non-brit/european driver ( in that order of preference).
It was Frank Williams who was impressed by Juan Pablo Montoya’s F3 exploits that he was offered Williams Contract. He was loaned to CART series to give opportunity to test Zanardi.
One point that was conveniently overlooked by the author is Montoya’s contribution to McLaren’s Rear suspension Geometry, which was one of its many problems ( primary being Compact Newey design not gelling with the Mercedes Engine). Juan actively worked with McLaren Engineers to resolve the rear suspension issues in car design, something that Kimi or David Coulthard before him had not been able to do.
For twice as cardinal errors that Lewis Hamilton has done at critical junctures on 2007-08 campaigns the Self Proclaimed F1 Pundits have never lambasted him 1/10th as they lambasted Montoya.
Juan Pablo is classic example of what happens to a race winner when team management doesn’t back its driver to the hilt. and Lewis Hamilton is example of what happens when team management puts its weight behind a driver and provides him technical and moral support
Oliver
3rd August 2009, 13:35
It is often easy for viewers to confuse a driver’s attitude or personality, with performance. It takes a lot of personal discipline to move away from that, “because I don’t like him, he is useless”, mentality
Filipe
3rd August 2009, 16:08
Thanks to point out that JPM was loaned to Ganassi and was always expect to make the jump to Williams after a couple of years. Then, Duncan article is full of mistakes like that.
DC
4th August 2009, 11:36
It doesn’t look like there are any hard feelings. Montoya just on his Twitter that he just got a call from Frank Williams.
http://twitter.com/jpmontoya
Montoya is also in the NASCAR play-off thingy at the moment. (Can’t really understand that. The Chase? or something.) He seems to be doing well.
Oliver
3rd August 2009, 9:44
Montoya also gave up some wins as Kimi was going for the title. Besides montoya and Kimi have car set up preferences at opposing ends of the scale, so it took Mclaren a while to get the car up to Montoya’s liking.
Nick
3rd August 2009, 15:52
um, spa? when kimi went two seconds faster during Montoyas pitstop? Montoya gave the up? i dont think so. how about 2006? Montoya was even worse. The kimi hate continues.
Montoya also gave up wins? how about Kimi’s dnf 3 times while in the lead, san marino, hockenheim, euro gp. Also, 3 engine penaltys when he set pole or top 3…thus fighting his way back up the grid.
I remember Montoya only losing in Hungary maybe…while in spa he crashed with backmarker, turkey he again hit a backmarker, suzuka he crashed a backmarker. Montoya without a doubt the most overrated.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 16:08
Check your data friend, Montoya was cruising home till that fatal pit-stop when McLaren orchestrated “Switch” to ensure Kimi gets ahead. It was natural to do as at that stage of championship they had to back Kimi as he had genuine shout at championship. If not for that “Switch” JPM wouldn’t have even been where he would have got tangled with Pizzonia.
2006 was Height of Unprofessionalism that a team can demonstrate. After Signing Alonso, McLaren practically switched off the plug on 2006 campaign in winter 2005. There wasn’t a single race where they went like bunch of rookies, with wrongly mapped engines, JPM and Kimi running barely 6-7 laps in Free Practice while other teams were running anywhere in excess of 15 laps per session. Its hard to believe for a team like McLaren that boasts abundance of resource not being able to give JPM car till Q1 phase in Imola’06. While the other drivers were running qualifiers JPM was trying to work on his car setup and inspite of that he made it to the Podium in that race. McLaren did everything possible to ruin the careers of their incumbent drivers in 2006. Of course Kimi had firm Ferrari contract in his back pocket and cared rat’s a$$ for all the cheap tricks that woking based team resorted to in 2006 season.
Should I elaborate on all ‘interesting coincidences’ where JPM was always released in traffic while Kimi in Clean air in qualifiers in the newly introduced Qualifiying format.
This all is “Pure Data” No hear say conspiracy theories.
– Yes while the So Called F1 Masters can’t do much better without Aerodynamic assistance of their Car, JPM had balls to drive worst aerodynamic car designed by Williams to race win in Brazil 2004 (Last of Williams F1 win). Whoever could drive that dog of a car to race win , doesn’t need anything to prove to anyone about racing and driving skills, whatever series one drives in..
v8
3rd August 2009, 8:37
oho so this duncan stephen plagiarised my name…hahaha but its cool. i forgive you as the article is nice otherwise……
Brits on Pole - LJH
3rd August 2009, 9:25
Craig Dolby, currently driving quite successfully for SLF’s Tottenham Hotspur team and interviewed by us a couple of weeks ago: “I think [going to America] is a completely other route. It’s hard because I think that, as soon as you go to America, your F1 dream goes. It’s hard because you’d make money by going to America but it’s very hard to then come back over, like Bourdais has proved, and get to Formula One.”
Full interview here.
Also interesting is the fact that Adam Christodoulou has gone over to Star Mazda, a US junior open-wheel series, where he’s doing pretty well. This driver has a claim to be one of the most promising of the British up-and-coming ranks so it will be interesting to see if driving in the US really does put a halt to his European career. Of course, he had a bit of a torrid time over here during his carting days, and may be wanting to put the Atlantic between him and that incident.
Dolby on Christodoulou: “He’s doing very well and I think he will have a career in America, but whether he comes back to England, I don’t know. It’s very difficult to get that connection back. It seems a lot of drivers go there and don’t come back.”
don deele
3rd August 2009, 9:48
I commented on this before. Again, I believe, it’s due to the courses in America being the main factor for the inability for a winning “Champ” driver to do well in F1. We just don’t have tracks that prepare you for Europe and abroad. Any decent driver can adapt to more downforce on a given track. But to be expected to perform on a “stage” that’s longer, wider, and safer right away for the first time is a lot to ask. As we’ve seen, you only get one or two seasons to do it. When Mario won in F1, he raced at Long Beach, Watkins Glen, Las Vegas, etc. F1 moved on a long time ago. Those tracks have not. Actually, none in the States have. So venue-wise, Indy Car is not a stepping stone to F1. Go GP2.
French frog
3rd August 2009, 9:48
Here what is said on french forum :
Bourdais with its 4 titles believed when he arrived in TR that his team will respond to his expectations. In particular, he doesn’t like car which oversteers. In facts, STR3 and STR4 have this behavior and the lack of practice time (due to bourdais crash in Barcelona and to new rules in 2009) made that he never manage to get a neat setup and that at the end, he was using Buemmi setup that is an admission of powerlessness. Everybody here think that he made some mistakes by having a too direct communication (no cant) even if it gave us a lot of informations and that TR didn’t give him the chances to express himself. He enter in F1 to late with too much expectations on what should be a F1 car. Vettel was much younger and a much more malleable driver. He manage to adapt himself much more easely to TR cars with the exceptional results that we all know.
that’s a deception that is also due to Briatore attitude that ever refuse to get Bourdais. But all Renault fans would have liked to have a Alonso – Bourdais pair instead of a Alonso – Piquet pair.
Perhaps that the Alonso – Grosjean pair will reconcile Renault fans with Briatore.
Sorry for all my english mistakes :)
Patrickl
3rd August 2009, 10:00
I’d say Piquet has the same problem. He can be fast in a simpler car, but F1 seems just one step too high for him.
Alex 3
3rd August 2009, 23:41
So what is Alonzo’s excuse? He certainly has the experience with Renault and McLaren as well as being world champion.
It’s the car as much as the driver. Trying to seperate them and make the drive the fall guy is just not on.
F1 is a team sport. The WHOLE package has to be right if there is to be success. Just ask Lewis.
Patrickl
4th August 2009, 17:07
What are you talking about? Alonso is doing a whole lot better than Piquet in that car.
marc
3rd August 2009, 10:29
ages ago champ cars where slightly harder to drive than f1 cars. but they weren’t as fast. So people like Juan Pablo Montoya had a reasonable chance of being competitive in F1..and he was! now champ cars can be classed as “lorries” because there aerodynamics ain’t as great as F1s so bourdais was taking a to big of a step. He shoulda went into GP2 or something
Tim
3rd August 2009, 10:43
Bourdais is a former Formula 3000 (which preceded GP2) champion, so a move to GP2 would have been something of a step back…
French frog
3rd August 2009, 10:29
Even if I’m not a big fan of Piquet, he spend 1 year and a half with a car that didn’t have all the improvments of Alonso car and with a fuel charge that oblige him to wait for an earthquake on the track, a meteorite fall and a H1N1 pandemic.
A driver without confidence is as fast as my grandmother
Patrickl
3rd August 2009, 12:54
Nonsense. Piquet almost always had the same material.
That he was running heavy fuel loads was because Piquet is so extremely poor at qualifying. All cars that far back in the field start on high fuel loads.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 14:36
You sound like Briatore :P. Are you Briatore :-?
Having said that Piquet is not able to make it past earlier rounds in qualifying to give him benefit of doubt and sympathy like say one gives to Heikki. Heikki at least keeps Hamilton honest most of the times by making to same round as Hamilton
Patrickl
3rd August 2009, 22:45
Lol I’m not Briatore, but like him I’m sick and tired of the lame excuses.
By Piquet’s own words, he didn’t have the same equipment in only 4 out of 27 races.
It’s absurd to even present that as a reason for his failure let alone as the most important one.
Rabi
3rd August 2009, 10:37
I thought Kubica was tagged by Renault before BMW?
French frog
3rd August 2009, 10:47
You’re right Rabi but Briatore let him go
Damon
3rd August 2009, 11:14
Why does competing in ChampCar define who Bourdais is as a driver? Huh?
He did win the F3000 Championship – and that’s where the best European drivers are born and prove themselves.
He’s been competing very successfuly in Le Mans, scoring two second places. And this is what he has achieved most recently.
Doesn’t this define him as a great sportscar driver???
And because of that F1 has become a very elitist club which doesn’t have the capacity
And as regards the technology argument: Are the LMP cars so much inferior to F1 cars? Are they inferior at all?
Well, I don’t think so. And Sebestien seems to master them perfectly. He jumped to an LMP car this year and was uber fast right away.
This only proves that there is something wrong with F1 cars. Because they don’t allow a good racing driver to be a good racing driver – instead, F1 has become a discipline on its own, where universal driving skills are less important than some specific skills required nowhere else in the world but in F1.
This is a shame.
And because of that, F1 has become a closed circle elitist club which doesn’t give a platform for the most talented drivers from all over the world to compete against one another, but instead favours a small group of young drivers who have been bred specifically for F1 and haven’t proven themselves anywhere else outside it.
Lustigson
3rd August 2009, 12:14
> the F3000 Championship – and that’s
> where the best European drivers are
> born and prove themselves
Sorry to rain on your parade, but this is a widespread misconception. Of all Formula 2, Formula 3000 and now GP2 champions, only one (1) became F1 champion, too: one L.C. Hamilton in 2008. Sadly I haven’t got the statistics right now, but even the F2/F3000/GP2 race winners haven’t been very successful in Formula One.
Damon
3rd August 2009, 13:45
Read more carefully – I said “best European drivers”, not “best F1 drivers (drivers that got lucky in F1?)”.
Brits on Pole - LJH
3rd August 2009, 13:22
I do agree with this point about elitism. No disrespect whatsoever to either Keith or Duncan who are both great guys who follow other race series in addition to Formula One. But F1 and sometimes its fans too can be extremely arrogant on occasion.
American racing is a great spectator sport that has much to offer European fans. And one thing we hear from every driver we speak to is how much nicer it is to race over there. The finances stack up better, the atmosphere is equally competitive on the track but much friendlier and more supportive off it. And the exclusivity and insider culture of F1 is anathema in the States where fans have a level of access to drivers and teams that you couldn’t dream of in F1. Fans are, put simply, part of the club in the US, and a valued part at that.
F1 and by extension GP2 are so exclusive and so expensive to reach that there is a whole generation of talented British drivers, without manufacturer or sponsor backing or a family with resources to fund their racing, that have simply had to find ways to drive that don’t involve them. That’s a reason why there are so many Brits in the IRL and associated series. Also, see friendliness, above.
One final point. If F1 can’t even be bothered to hold a race on the North American continent, why on earth shoud American race drivers and fans actually give a stuff about it? This is likely a one-sided comparison. F1 fans might feel the need to draw parallels. IRL fans are far less likely to bother.
Gman
4th August 2009, 4:58
That’s a great analysis LJH!!! As an American who lvoes F1- and just caught on in the last few yeats without any history in the sport- I can agree with much of what you have said.
When you talk about Americans not wanting to bother with F1, you hit it on the head when nothing that F1 can’t be bothered to put a race on over here. American talent in racing continues to go to NASCAR, or to the IndyCar series and the to NASCAR, becuase that’s where the money and the fame is. Now we have some people in the form of USF1 who want to give some Americans a shot, and hopefully that will allow some talented drivers a chance to shine on the world stage.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 14:39
Touché – Couldn’t agreee more
Filipe
3rd August 2009, 16:48
Couldn’t agree more either.
I do believe that a much larger problem than cars is the very different atmosphere of both worlds. Among all the drivers that come from US, only Villeneuve and now Bordais do look like they really want to stay in Europe, guys like Da Matta and Zanardi looked more reliefed of getting ride of F1 than their teams were of getting ride of them. It still shocks me that fans think there’s nothing wrong in the Montoya case: there was a top driver in the series that decide he rather driver a mid pack Nascar car than remain in F1. Why? Because he took a look and decide that he had drive for Chip Ganassi, Frank Williams and Ron Dennis and decide he was happier with Chip as his boss.
Macedo
3rd August 2009, 17:10
It sounds like “Those grapes are too green and sour for my taste…” Don’t you think?
F1 is the most complex and demanding category, that’s all. And while the other racing championships remains the same for decades, F1 rules have to be changed every 3 or 4 years for the cars not to break the driver’s back and neck. You simply can’t compare an Indy car to a F1 car. F1 is light years ahead.
F1 is the autosport’s pinnacle, and MUST be elitist. That’s the F1’s DNA.
antonyob
3rd August 2009, 11:16
Bourdais and others fail to change their mindset from the US cars that are mainly driven on mechanical grip and F1 cars that have a much greater amount of aerodynamic grip. But its not that the quality is necessarily poor in the US; if you’ve been skiing and then tried snowboarding you’ll know however good you were counts for zip on a board. Its very hard for your brain to be instinctive at 2 things that are superficially similar. To suggest the quality is poorer in the US is an age old snobbery that we Europeans have indulged in since motor racing began.
But Montoya wasn’t top top line by any stretch though he showed flashes of it, then again Justin Wilson is hardly a glowing testament of the transition going the other way. You pick your examples to tell the story you want to tell.
Damon
3rd August 2009, 11:30
I’ll take the ‘IndyCar drivers’ ability to drive a car over the ‘F1 drivers’ ability to set-up an F1 car any day!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05vLC_zjPpY
This is were a driver should compete against other drivers! On the track – and not in the garage.
And, consequently, I hold Nigel Mansell’s 1993 IndyCar Championship that he won because of his driving skills in much higher regard than his 1992 F1 Championship, which he won because his Williams was way faster than anybody else’s car.
You cannot judge a driver by how he performs in F1. It just doesn’t make sense.
K
3rd August 2009, 16:09
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uk2p2nRK-p4
Damon
3rd August 2009, 20:34
Yeah, I wonder he it’d look like if Schumacher drove the 1995 Symtek.
K
3rd August 2009, 22:37
It would look pretty similar compared to his team mate the lap time would just be slower for the both because of the overall package. Two drivers in the same machinery are being analyzed.
The Benetton wasn’t the outright best car that season, neither was it the previous season and he won both championships. Good drivers make a difference. Champ car drivers still have to set up their cars, you might as well say “put them all in show room sports cars then we’ll see who the fastest is” but of course you wouldn’t because that would be lame.
Damon
3rd August 2009, 22:53
No. If Schumi drove a Symtek and Herbert a Benetton. Who’d be the better driver then?
And who would Schumi be then against all the drivers in the Ferraris, Williamses, Jordans and the rest decent cars in the field (which there wasn’t many of in ’95)?
He’d be a backmarker.
Anyway, that’s irrelevant, because you cannot require from anybody to be like Schumacher.
Clay
3rd August 2009, 11:35
As an aussie I look at Briscoe. He was the Toyota tester one season (2004?) when friday testing was allowed, and he was always quick in the Friday sessions – top 5 normally. This was in the early days of one engine per race weekend which didn’t apply to testers obviously but his speed was there for all to see. He also won the euro F3 championship don’t forget.
He is a classic example of a euro style racer who struggled at first on ovals but raced very well on what the yanks call ‘road courses’. I think he would do well in F1, but then I am a patriotic aussie and this may cloud my reasoning on the matter.
I think at the end of the day the car makes far more difference than the driver. Were i a team owner I’d have a technical team of Newey, Brawn, Byrne and Symonds design my car over Alonso and Hamilton as drivers any day. As Fernando has shown you cannot demonstrate your ability as a driver anywhere near your potential in a shabby car. Bourdais wasn’t as quick as Vettel and TR were probably right to fire him for being slow. But I think it is a very broad statement to say Indy drivers couldn’t cut it in F1 anymore.
Prisoner Monkeys
3rd August 2009, 12:58
I think there are deeper problems with Toro Rosso than their driver management. They shouldn’t be in Formula One; they’re nothing more than a glorified GP2 team. Their drivers are brought into the sport to get them some experience, and then poached away by Red Bull as soon as they come good. They run the same car as their parent team, yet they have to wait for all the updates. They’re essentially kept under Red Bull’s heel, unable to actually compete. At least when they were Minardi, they were actually able to have a decent go at it. I was actually quite looking forward to seeing them gone, – Epsilon Euskadi claimed to be in negotiations – but unfortuantely, it was decided that Dietrich Maserchitz could not commit to selling them. So we’re stuck with them until 2012, unless someone finds away around that.
goofy
3rd August 2009, 13:09
Timo Glock?
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 13:22
@Goofy – The author seems to use only those examples which s/he finds convenient.
Alex Bkk
3rd August 2009, 13:48
Timo Glock is successfull…are you sure.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 13:51
– subject to the quality of equipment he is driving, he is not exactly driving McLaren car from 2007-08 is he :-?
Alex Bkk
3rd August 2009, 14:15
Yeah…I guess the term successful is a bit ambiguous and definable according anyones particular bias…but I really can’t disagree with this article.
None of the drivers mentioned were American, they just raced in an American series. I used to watch CART in its heyday and F1. I saw many drivers switch sides. It seemed that the F1 drivers that went to cart did much better than the Cart drivers that went to F1. That includes Michale Andretti…who teamed briefly with Senna at Macca. He was mega in CART, but…
Cheers, Alex
Damon
3rd August 2009, 15:13
@ Alex
“It seemed that the F1 drivers that went to cart did much better than the Cart drivers that went to F1.”
– Doh!!
Every single F1 driver who went to IndyCar got a competetive car! Not only as fast as all other cars, but a car that he was able to set-up the way he liked. Why?? Because there are no uncompetetive/slow/underpowered cars in that series, there are no Torro Rossos, Minardis or Spykers.
And what did the IndyCar champs get? Ferraris? McLarens? None of that.
But one did get a top car – Jacques Villeneuve. He drove to pole in his first race, and had he not make one mistake, he would win the race, but he came second anyway. He almost won the WDC in his 1st season. He won it in his second.
Montoya got a good car, result: a win in his rookie season, and a 3rd place in WDC in next two seasons.
_______________________
And what happens to the IndyCar champs in F1 is actually the same as what happens to… F1 champs in F1:
– Damon Hill 1997
– Villeneuve 1999 onwards
– Hakkinen 2001
– Alonso 2008-2009-…
– Hamilton 2009 (until mid season)
– Button 2010 (that’s for sure)
You get a slow car – you’re done.
But the F1 champs are lucky – because the F1 WDC gives them an immunity against any criticism.
Whereas the Indy champs have nothing to defend their credibility with.
Patrickl
3rd August 2009, 22:50
@Damon,
Does it matter what car they get? They are compared to their team mates driving the same equipment.
For instance, Bourdais gets beaten by a rookie twice in a row.
Andretti did get a McLaren BTW and Senna went 1.5 seconds faster in Andretti’s car (in those days they could swap cars) during qualifying.
Damon
4th August 2009, 10:03
@ Patrickl
And what if Buemi is in fact Formula 1’s best driver?? Do you know he isn’t??
Bourdais has never really been more than 0.15s slower than him, and he was faster on several occasions.
Buemi and Bourdais might have been F1’s new Senna and Prost, but we wouldn’t know that.
Patrickl
4th August 2009, 17:13
@Damon,
Don’t be ridiculous. We would know. Buemi obviously isn’t that good either.
Besides, Bourdais got trashed by Vettel already. It was Bourdais who made Vettel look so “great”. Now that Vettel is up against Webber he suddenly isn’t so amazing anymore.
Eric
3rd August 2009, 13:27
Damon, ARE YOU SERIOUS! You wrote: “I’ll take the ‘IndyCar drivers’ ability to drive a car over the ‘F1 drivers’ ability to set-up an F1 car any day!!!” Have you ever even watched a crappy IRL race? I am from the US and have watched quite a few and let me tell you that 90% of the drivers are mediocre at best, and the other 10% are not much better, for christ sake they have three girls racing in the series! The IRL is a joke of a series nowhere near the level of F1 or even GP2. The series has become so bad that many of the races are not even shown live anymore. And let me tell you a very sad note, Many Americans who don’t know crap about open wheel racing are told by news sources in the US (ESPN, CNN) that Danica Patrick is the premier open wheel driver in the world! That makes me sick to my stomach every time I hear it? So don’t compare drivers in IRL to F1 thats like comparing the ferris wheel at your local fair to the London Eye.
Brits on Pole - LJH
3rd August 2009, 13:39
> for christ sake they have three girls racing in the series!
How funny. This is just like Godwin’s Law. Make a comment like that and it’s an immediate green light for everyone else to point and laugh and disregard everything else you try to say.
Remind us to point and laugh again when Bia Figueiredo or Simona De Silvestro become household names in racing…
Eric
3rd August 2009, 13:49
Until they become household names, point and laugh at yourself.
Mark Hitchcock
3rd August 2009, 16:42
No Eric, we’re still gonna point and laugh at you.
Women can be just as good at racing as men are if they’re given the opportunity, get over it.
Gezz
3rd August 2009, 19:22
I understand that you’re all in for equal-rights and stuff like that, but let us not kid ourselves shall we? Women will never be as good as men at racing, simply because men are better suited to race than women. You’ll never get a woman into the same shape as a top-trained man, she’ll never have the same bravery and courage as a man with balls of steel – which is simply because her testosterone levels will never be as high. Therefore women can NOT be as good as racing as men. I don’t doubt you that you can probably find a good female driver who can keep up, but she’ll never be the best, simply because of the fact that men are better suited for sports than women.
Gezz
3rd August 2009, 19:24
It would be like saying women can compete with men on the 100m sprint distance. Racing today is much more demanding and sophisticated than it was 30 years ago, racing drivers are in as good shape as elite marathon runners and that will always speak to the advantage of men.
Eric
3rd August 2009, 20:23
That would explain the women champions in all the major motorsports…. oh thats right there aren’t any!
Oliver
3rd August 2009, 13:43
I agree with you but won’t say so publicly. :-)
In the past, I used to wonder why the Indy car drivers looked so much fatter than their F1 counterparts.
Unfortunately a lot of talented drivers are now ending up there for lack of slots in F1.
Damon
3rd August 2009, 14:36
I meant the real IndyCar that later became CART or ChampCar, not the idiotic IRL.
Gman
4th August 2009, 5:16
I woult not make the same statement about the women racing in the series, but you do make several very good points…..
I’m also an American and I can agree with you 100% about U.S. news outlets feeding us the Danica PR nonsense. Sure she looks good, but she’s a poor-quality driver. I can’t tell you how frustrating it becomes when I try to explain F1 to my friends and the first question I get is “Formula 1 is what Danica Patrick drives in, right? ”
As for the drivers, I think the top-tier guys- Dixion, Dario, Helio, Briscoe, Kanaan, Wheldon, Tracy- could probably give the F1 guys a run for their money in somewhat-equal machines. But a poor-quality driver is still a poor-quality driver, regardless of the series. To Danica’s credit, she’s out-performing her three teamamtes, but she’s still way below the previously-mentioned drivers in terms of talent.
JCM
3rd August 2009, 13:31
This article isnt the best ive read on f1fanatic to say the least.
It almost seems to more of an attack on American racing and the drivers it produces than anything else… I dont get what point its trying to get across??
Shahid
3rd August 2009, 13:33
Everybody could say the same about Button if he wins this year
steve o
3rd August 2009, 13:42
I second the Timo how convenient to forget that. I have to say, this sort of rubbish article get published any time anybody from the states comes over. Plenty of subconscious european snobbery for sure. What will you say next year with two american drivers ? Can’t wait.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 13:49
Remember how they European Snob Lambasted Yuji Ide when he spun in Imola’06 driving 4 year old Arrows Car for Super Aguri Team and kept mum when Lewis Hamilton went moving grass in Silverstone this year. And How quick everyone was to write off Massa who was driving “Dry Setup” Ferrari in Rainy Silverstone’08. Everybody laughed heartiliy at his 6 spins while conveniently covering the fact that his team mate also spun similarly at least 3 times in same corner and conveniently they forgot that Ferrari was expecting dry race in latter stages and hence gambled with “DRY SETUP”
Gman
4th August 2009, 5:22
I woulden’t exactly put it up to Euro-snobbery…there are plenty of people here in America who rip on the IndyCar series too, and with some good reasons. I do agree that excluding Glock was a mistake here, but I don’t think the author has anything against Americans or American racing per se.
As for the Americans next year, there is nothing more I want in the sports world than to see multiple Americans racing in F1 and winning Grands Prix and World Championships. But it’s looking like it will be only one American in a race seat, alongside an experienced F1 driver of another nationality. Still, Americans who want to race in F1 now have a pathway to the sport, and it’s going to be fun in a few years to see how it pays off :)
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 13:43
Utterly useless article. To succeed in F1 or for that matter in any sports key ingredients are capability of contestant and the support s/he receives from him team/support staff etc; These guys are all race drivers they have been driving whatever car that they get on limit for all their lives. The question in F1 is how honest is the team about a) equipment b) Strategy c) backing driver when things don’t go write due to mistakes in a) and b) and of course driver errors under pressure (remember Brazil’07, Fuji’08 ??)
Can author honestly say that the drivers he has type-casted as “Indy” drivers get that backing from teams on a), b) and c)
Classic example was Last race that JPM drove for McLaren Indy’06 and the 1st corner incident. Indy circuit layout is notorious for the first corner incident. Similar incident had happened in 2004 event of Indy as well( When European press couldn’t blame JPM who started from Pitlane). While the world was castigating JPM for taking out Kimi, Only one person who gave statement to back JPM was Martin Whitmarsh, who had said “If he was driving half a kilometer slower than he was, I wouldn’t be hiring him to drive F1 car”. Alas Whitmarsh was Managing McLaren then and not Dennis.
Even in the current reviewing of “Heikki” Contract saga in McLaren, Martin has already mentioned in press about offering Heikki the contract before Norbert Haug came and stated ambiguios. Of all persons, Whitmarsh is honest about the fact that Heikki gets all the developments on his car delayed as compared to Lewis and in competitive McLaren for entire 2008 season McLaren was fueling Heikki heavier than Lewis in Q3 to cover their strategies.
And Imagine if Like Lewis Hamilton JPM(or any non Brit driver) had tyre management issues and team had to cover for him like they did in Turkey’08. The Press/Fans/Pundits would have had a hayday picking on the driver and his non-ability to manage F1 car/Tyre. In case of Hamilton it was publicized as “Thinking on Feet by the team”
doctorvee
3rd August 2009, 14:00
I don’t think you can call Timo Glock a success from Champ Car to F1. He only had 13 races in Champ Car, after already having had experience of F1 cars. He then spent two years in GP2 rehabilitation before coming back to F1, by which time his Champ Car experience will have been not much more than a memory.
I have to say I’m quite surprised that people are calling Montoya a top driver. He was sacked in disgrace mid-season by McLaren. He did win races, but he was outclassed by his team mate, not just Raikkonen, but Ralf Schumacher too. Ralf Schumacher — not the most well-regarded of drivers — won twice as many grands prix as Montoya did while he was at Williams. That doesn’t look like the record of a top driver to me.
For me, the fact that a fancied four times Champ Car champion couldn’t cut it, and no other Champ Car driver has been able to cut it, is revealing. Maybe it’s revealing about F1 or it’s revealing about Champ Car. Likely it’s revealing about both. I would be happy to concede that it has changed if another driver comes over from Indy Car to F1 and makes a success for themselves, but given the recent record of these drivers I doubt many team bosses are interested.
Alex Bkk
3rd August 2009, 14:20
goofy
3rd August 2009, 14:34
http://tinyurl.com/neqakg
DMW
4th August 2009, 15:58
“Ralf Schumacher — not the most well-regarded of drivers — won twice as many grands prix as Montoya did while he was at Williams. That doesn’t look like the record of a top driver to me.”
So I am more convinced that the article’s first premise– Montoya’s poor abilities — is the main pillar of this article. (The second, car complexity, is not compelling in its own terms.) By my math, Montoya had more than 2X as many poles as the vaunted team-incumbent Ralf Schumacher in the Williams, and Montoya’s 30 podiums bests Schumacher on half the race entries. So the conclusion that he was “outclassed” by Schumacher, in any event, has no support in the facts.
The article presumes that Montoya was forced out because he was too fat and too slow. And as the recent high-water mark for U.S.-talent in the sport, his fate is used to establishes the conclusion that F1 is not for yanks. The premise is not accurate. The more reasonable hypothesis, that good U.S. drivers are drummed out or drawn away for other reasons, is the one that needs proper investigation.
dwp
6th August 2009, 2:59
@doctorvee
Is there a good source for these statistics? I looked and found this site but it doesn’t show wins but if you look at the record it points to Montoya having a better one than Ralf Schumacher
Ralf
JPM
They were both at Williams 2001-2004 and if you add up their total points for those years, from the site linked above, you get Ralf with 173 and Montoya with 201. Ralf was in F1 more years than Montoya and had 7 wins vs Montoya’s 6, hardly a fair comparison.
So, what’s wrong here?
BTW Montoya was far more interesting to watch than Ralf.
Kovy
3rd August 2009, 14:20
A lot of it is down to practice in the specific car or type of car. If I had $5 million, I could buy an ex-F1 car, hire out a circuit for a month, and after a couple of thousand laps I’d be bang on the pace.
doctorvee
3rd August 2009, 14:34
Good luck.
Dan M
3rd August 2009, 15:36
Poor Taste?
ajokay
3rd August 2009, 16:24
/giggle
Sven
3rd August 2009, 15:36
Many promising drivers fail in F1 not only those coming from IRL. The simple truth is probably that F1 is so much faster than any other racing series that any weakness is exposed right away. The wery good F1 drivers tends to show their skill almoast instantly once arriving to F1.
Damon
3rd August 2009, 15:50
No.
garyc
3rd August 2009, 15:57
No IRL driver has ever gone on to F1 and unless the IRL improves very very significantly, none ever will.
DMW
3rd August 2009, 16:05
Article seems to rest on two spurious premises: 1. High tech cars are harder to drive than simpler ones and 2. Montoya is a hack, and typical of his peers.
The first is pretty bizarre. Does the author mean that a car with traction control, computer-assisted gear changes, and quasi-antilock (engine) braking is harder to drive fast than an IRL car? Americans are too dumb to work the buttons? IN any event, the GP2 cars that are supposed to groom F1 pilots, are not bristling with baffling furturistic technology.
The second point has been sufficiently destroyed on this board. Montoya’s car control, raw speed as shown in qualifying, and ability to make a pass were legendary in his day. He was ultimately undone by some poor design choices at Williams, and some dodgy reliability at McLaren, and his own unwillingness to drive mired in the peleton, given his options.
And options/economics is the other real issue here. Though it is 90% all-American hacks, there are some good IRL pilots who could be competitive with a a couple seasons in a good U.S. road course junior formula. Unfortunately, for an American, none of those are a ticket to IRL, and F1 is too remote from these shores.
Once a good driver gets to the IRL and gets his championship he has little incentive to make the jump. The choice of getting paid a mint to do CRASHCAR and sleeping in your own bed every Sunday night, or getting slapped around by clowns like Tost for a couple years, is an easy one.
Damon
3rd August 2009, 17:12
+1
Patrickl
3rd August 2009, 22:53
I guess he’s saying it’s a lot more technical to deal with yes. You don’t just get in the car tweak the wings a bit and be done with it.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 16:40
About Sebass – If not for certain team principle who is also “driver manager” acting complete a$$hole and giving hard times to driver he doesn’t manage, Sebastian Bourdais was natural choice to drive for French Team on back of him F3000. Briatore managing team as well the drivers driving for that team is clear case of conflict of interest and we have seen that team throw under bus drivers who by sheer coincidence are not managed by Briatore.
But F1 itself has become such a mess that this small case of conflict of interest always goes overlooked. Oh yes Spanish telecom giant Telefonica was ready to extend its sponsorship with Renault F1 on back of Alonso leaving Renault end of 2006.But what prevented that from happening, yes they wanted certain Spanish speaking Colombian driver to take Alonso’s place and certain Briatore was trying to push driver managed by him for 2007 season ( Ultimately Webber didn’t oblige to Briatore and went to RedBull after his 2006 stint with Williams-BMW)
Filipe
3rd August 2009, 16:50
Funny thing is that I’ve seen pretty much the same arguments being used in Nascar boards to prove that Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart are the world greatest drivers.
Ken
3rd August 2009, 19:29
The author wrote what everyone knows from the outside,
I was hoping he gave us some inside information on the matter
I dont think why INDYcar drivers fail or dont have long careers in F1
isnt so cut and dry.
I’m a long time follower of F1 but the article has a scent of snobbery to me.
Even Damon Hill won a championship in F1!
Damon
3rd August 2009, 20:15
Hahaha :-) Why would you say that?
No seriously, look – Damon dominated David Coulthard in Williams in 1995 the same as Hakkinen or Raikkonen did in McLaren.
I think this is a valid comparison and puts him well against other F1 champions.
PS. And no – I’m not Damon Hill’s fan. Damon is my username because it’s similar to my real (Polish) name. ;)
_____________________________________
And as to the article, seeing how many of the guys have already voiced their opinion, I have to add that I’m also not very fond of it. It doesn’t present various perspectives on the matter and seems biased.
Eric
3rd August 2009, 20:29
Damon Hill was a quality driver, not only did he dominate DC in 95 but who could forget his drive for TWR Arrows in… can’t remember if it was Hungary? or Spa when he brought that back marker car in to 2nd place.
Damon
3rd August 2009, 20:42
Hungary, yes. He was leading the race 4 laps (or sth like that) before the finish when his car suddenly began to go slower and slower, and he lost the lead. He should’ve won it.
goofy
3rd August 2009, 19:47
Keith, i read your blog because i think it’s a piece of (what we call in germany) qualityjournalismn. This means all reports and articles are well researched and written with twice thinking. But this article obviously fails. Please don’t publish anymore of those falseinformation.
I think UK is the birthplace of qualityjournalism and of tabloid press (i call that completly rubbish) Please don’t walk that thin line.
Williams 4ever
3rd August 2009, 20:46
I second that request…
Patrickl
3rd August 2009, 23:02
What’s wrong with it. He gives an overview of several “IndyCar” to F1 transistions and correctly concludes that the drivers who were unbeatable champions in IndyCar didn’t do better than being average drivers in F1. Where some like Andretti, Zanardi and Bourdais were complete failures.
Doesn’t it say something when the 4 time Champ Car champion gets replaced because he can’t even beat a rookie?
I guess it hurts people’s ego’s to hear that IndyCar isn’t filled with the worlds best drivers, but that doesn’t mean the article isn’t correct.
doctorvee
3rd August 2009, 23:13
I’m sorry if anyone thinks my article was biased, but I looked at all of the drivers who have made a direct transition from IndyCar to F1 in the past decade, and beside some rather poorly-argued points about how good Montoya is (the guy who won half as many races as Ralf Schumacher in the same equipment), no-one has been able to say what IndyCar drivers came up with the goods in F1. That’s because there haven’t been any. And that was my point.
goofy
4th August 2009, 0:42
at this point you are right. But your article implents that drivers who ran races in the states can not compete in F1. And that’s just wrong because there are plenty cases that disprove this point. And comments like “He then spent two years in GP2 rehabilitation before coming back to F1” emphasises this thought. U really think a racer needs to cure from driving in america?
It’s right that no driver from american racing series became champs in F1 for a decade but does that mean their worse?
How many former F1 drives went to DTM and did not archive nothing? Is DTM that much better than F1?
doctorvee
4th August 2009, 1:17
Goofy, the point of my article was to ask why there is a trend away from F1 teams hiring Indy Car drivers. As Keith’s brilliant series outlined, there have been almost 100 drivers who have raced in both. But only a small handful have made the transition from Indy Car to F1 in recent years, including four drivers who have won Championships in both. My aim is to ask why there has been a change, especially as there is no sign of an improvement on this front.
It’s not really to say that if a driver is successful in one series then moves to another series and is less successful, that the second series must be better. It wouldn’t be much of a surprise if an F1 driver moved to, say, Nascar, and failed to cut it there because they are radically different series. But Indy Car and F1 are not radically different — or at least, they weren’t. Back in the 1950s, the Indy 500 was even a Formula 1 World Championship event, and many drivers could have successful crossover careers. Not any more, seemingly.
Historically the link between DTM and F1 has not been so strong, so for me it is not particularly interesting to ask why F1 drivers tend not to be so competitive in it. But if you ask me for an answer it’s this: because most F1 drivers that join DTM do so when they have already had a substantial career and their talent is on the wane. I don’t think any drivers move from Indy Car to F1 because their career is winding down. But I think some drivers move from F1 to DTM with the intention of winding down.
doctorvee
4th August 2009, 1:18
Whoops, I messed up my writing of this comment a bit. The first paragraph should read:
Goofy, the point of my article was to ask why there is a trend away from F1 teams hiring Indy Car drivers. As Keith’s brilliant series outlined, there have been almost 100 drivers who have raced in both, including four drivers who have won Championships in both. But only a small handful have made the transition from Indy Car to F1 in recent years. My aim is to ask why there has been a change, especially as there is no sign of an improvement on this front.
Williams 4ever
4th August 2009, 13:25
This doesn’t necessarily mean lack of talent,it only means lack of opportunity in F1 because of limited number of seats.And if you have seen in past decade how many drivers without any connections to right people have made it to F1?
The driver on whose recent ejection from F1 this article was written,if he had agreed to have Flavio as his manager (along with team principle of Renault), Sebass would have got F1 ticket immediately after his F3000 success. Most of the drivers who decided to make career in the US didn’t do out of choice, They honed their skills in Junior Formulae and beating their competitors didn’t necessarily convert into offer from F1. So they had to make a choice and went to other series rather than waiting for the call that may or may not have come.
Irony is case some drivers who made it to F1 were not necessarily setting the Junior formulae on Fire, but found RIGHT MANAGER and RIGHT PR which proved useful in getting good publicity.
Classic Example is Jenson Button, He wasn’t exactly setting the world records in Junior Formulae. His fame to glory was 2nd position in Macau behind Darren Manning But the Right PR (and assistance from Brit Press) got him “Driver with Smooth driving style” title and that has seen him through so far. When the car sucks, and his team-mates are scoring better, his PR has ensured that his reputation stays intact.
In BAR years the car was always designed to his needs making Sato look like fool. The History is repeating with this years Brawn and 2007-08 the car was still being built taking Jense’s needs in mind.
Its time for you to follow up with article on “Honest Evaluation” of current breed in F1.
Williams 4ever
4th August 2009, 13:32
This doesn’t necessarily mean lack of talent,it only means lack of opportunity in F1 because of limited number of seats.And if you have seen in past decade how many drivers without any connections to right people have made it to F1?
The driver (Sebass) on whose recent ejection from F1 this article was written,if he had agreed to have Flavio as his manager (along with team principle of Renault), Sebass would have got F1 ticket immediately after his F3000 success.
Most of the drivers who decided to make career in the US didn’t do out of choice, They honed their skills in Junior Formulae and beating their competitors didn’t necessarily convert into offer from F1. So they had to make a choice and went to other series rather than waiting for the call that may or may not have come.
Irony is case some drivers who made it to F1 were not necessarily setting the Junior formulae on Fire, but found RIGHT MANAGER and RIGHT PR which proved useful in getting good publicity.
Classic Example is Jenson Button, He wasn’t exactly setting the world records in Junior Formulae. His fame to glory was 2nd position in Macau behind Darren Manning But the Right PR (and assistance from Brit Press) got him “Driver with Smooth driving style” title and that has seen him through so far. When the car sucks, and his team-mates are scoring better, his PR has ensured that his reputation stays intact.
And Point to Note is through his entire tenure with BAR-HONDA-BRAWN Car has been designed around his needs and not his Team-mates.
In BAR years the car was always designed to his needs making Sato look like fool. The History is repeating with this years Brawn and 2007-08 the car was still being built taking Jense’s needs in mind.
Its time for you to follow up with article on “Honest Evaluation” of current breed in F1.
Alex 3
3rd August 2009, 23:34
With the exception of Micheal Andretti I tend to disagree with this judgment of IRL/Champ Car drivers not cutting it in F1.
JPM did well but I do not see anything that suggests that the car was the pits and remains so to this day albeit it seems to have some improvement this season but it is far off the race pace of others.
The same can be said today of other cars.
STR is well behind the curve and changing drivers will not affect that until the car is better.
Piquet has been dumped by Renault with no IRL/Champ Car experience. His is all Europe, F3 GP2 etc. Even Alonzo with his years (vs 1. seasons)sees the current car as being the pits.
LH had a good car in 2007 and wasted his championship efforts on two occassions the most notable China. He has no IRL experience either. In 2008 he had a great car and won only in the closing laps of the last race. This year he sucked badly until Hungary.
Bourdais has equally suffered from a lack of quality in the car this year but as I recall in 2008 when the car was dialed in somewhat more that STR can usually do he did well until either the car let him down or someone else in a Toyota took him out.
De Matta? Same issue. Lousy car after his first year.
Andretti? The McLaren was not up to snuff either but I do not feel MA was committed to F1. You cannot fly over on Wednesday, practice or test Thursday and Friday, qualify and race only to jump on a plane and fly back to the US. It lacks commitment to the team and the people in the factory, limits the time in the car and obviously affects your mental and physical strength so it was not a surprise he failed miserably.
My understanding was Speed did a lot of the same.
F1 is a team/package sport. The best driver cannot make a lousy car competitive week in week out. A good car in the hands of any good driver will produce results.
Before the teams start blaming the drivers like Piquet, Bourdais, De Matta, JPM etc et al they need to ask “did we give them the best car out there and still they failed or did we give them a mediocre car with which they did their best based on their level of experience?.
And while I am at it JV as I recall drove every race in a car that was marginally competitive and like everyother champion finished at least 1 point ahead of his rivals of the day in the championship. He also committed to the sport unlike a lot of drivers including putting up his own money for BAR and Honda did nothing with that team either with Button and Rubens. He was as worthy and deserving of his championship as anyone. I only wish he had stayed with front running team. He would have won more championships had he done so.
Alex 3
3rd August 2009, 23:47
Another reflection.
Last Saturday at Kentucky Speedway the IRL event was amazing. For most of the last 80 of 200 laps it was wheel to wheel at 215 MPH at the front, at 3rd and 4th and at time all the way back to 7th and 8th. The margin at the checker was about 3 ft.
Yes this was an oval but it has been a helluva long time since I have seen this kind of driving sustained at any F1 venue lap after lap after lap. There is skill here that may be different but skill never the less.
When teams give these drivers a competitive car they will win. JPM is living proof. He won in CART, he has won in F1 and he has won and is closer to the big prize on NASCAR than most who have been there for years.
I suspect given a chance to drive a Red Bull or even the revamped McLaren he would make things happen.
Good drivers can make for good results only if the team and the package are there.
Steve K
4th August 2009, 3:10
Montoya is currently demonstrating that he is one of the top racers in the world. That’s not to say he is the best, but most drivers don’t leave show the variety others have. He is the modern day AJ Foyt or Mario Andretti. CART, F1, Grand Am, and NASCAR. Kings to Juan.
verasaki
4th August 2009, 3:53
News to me that Indy drivers were ever “in fashion” in F1.
Kudos to Duncan, though this is a difficult piece to tackle because really, you’d have to go into the details of every driver and what the individual circumstances were, because that’s what it boils down to, not that Indy drivers just aren’t as good as F1 drivers. I mean why didn’t Nelson Piquet succeed in Indy when Fittipaldi did? Would he have if he hadn’t shattered his legs at Indy?
I think maybe the writer got bogged down and tried to make this a comparison piece starting in the middle of the history (at one time Indy was part of the F1 championship as well as a race in it’s own right, so F1 and Indy drivers were racing side by side,I believe-I could be wrong but how fun is that?!) instead of just tackling “why the heck do Indy drivers not succeed in F1 in the last decade or so”. This seems to start with the JV era which would be okay but there is an allusion to Indy car drivers “no longer being up to scratch for F1”. That sort of makes it sound like they were jumping to F1 in droves all along, which is not true. There is a history of Indy drivers and F1 drivers making the switch but, it has never been quite as regular a feat as implied.
And I have to disagree, JV’s first two years were pretty decent. The wheel fell off in Japan (punishable by death these days, apparently) which was not actually his fault. Montoya had a good start-his pass on Schumi in Brazil is one of my favourites to this day. He probably should have done better but really, Williams dominance was on the wane by that time. His stint at McLaren- well, I still have questions about that and a few theories I’ll keep mum about. Michael Andretti is not even mentioned and there is a lot more there than just him being crap, alot of it his own doing but not all. Personally, I think Unser Jr. would have fared a bit better,(not much) but he was too smart to go for the deal being offered. Zanardi-well, he just had to give it another shot and he was certainly the most honest F1 driver to ever grace the sport-he just ‘fessed up to being under par in the new cars. He could not get a handle on left foot braking. The Champ Cars were heavier and braked entirely different than the F1 cars-which had evolved quite a bit since he’d last driven one. The fact that after his return to CART he was well on the way to being back on form by the Portland race and winning by the time he crashed in Germany should tell you he wasn’t exactly past his sell by.
I grant you, I can’t name a single Indy driver now who could or should make the transition (though I admit to a perverse desire to see the sweetheart of the rodeo get a clue about herself)but you really can not view Indy as being the same series that emerged in the ’90’s. I can barely watch it for any length of time. However, as F1 gaggles about with who’s in charge, who’s on page 1 of the tabloids and what the rules are and what the configuration is and on and on, I can see a possibiity that the two series might be edging closer to each other. Especially if F1 doesn’t stop dithering about what path it’s going to take to what future it can’t decide about.
Gman
4th August 2009, 5:35
Back when the Indy 500 was part of the F1 Championship, I don’t think many- indeed, if any- F1 drivers or teams made the trip to race in the event.
Gman
4th August 2009, 5:45
Well, we all poured in a slew of diverse opinions on this one, diden’t we?
As a fellow guest writer, I will come to Duncan’s defense on the fact that he was trying to cover one key issue- drivers making the jump from Indycar/IRL/Champ car to F1- and that blew up into a range of related debates. I don’t think he has any bias towards American-based racing, but he rightly dose point out that few IndyCar Drivers have been making the switch to F1. To me, it looks like the majority of IndyCar drivers are more than happy to be in that series and have little to no interest in taking on F1. We’ll se eif any of the young Americans- Andretti, Rahal, Hunter-Reay- take a chance with USF1, but most of the others seem happy to be over here.
The one thing I disagree a bit with is Duncan’s opinion on Montoya. Sure, he got out-performed by Ralf and never won the title, but he’s still a top-tier driver in my books. He was a champion in Europe, a champion and Indy 500 winner over here, and then was far more successful in F1 than many others who try. Now he’s finally starting to make a charge in NASCAR…to me, that shows raw racing talent.
Good article Duncan..you know you’re writing something good when you’ve got debate and chatter going on. Otherwise, they woulden’t bother to offer the coments ;)
doctorvee
4th August 2009, 13:35
Thanks Gman. It’s the best way. I’m not here to tell anyone what they expect to hear – there’s no point in that. I like to save my more thought-provoking articles for F1F rather than my own blog. Normally there is a big debate on my articles here, which I’m happy about. :)
JLS
4th August 2009, 18:23
Ever since the split, US drivers only adapted just on
ovals. It is a huge discrimintation towards US drivers
when the split occured. And despite the reunification,
we still see only 5-7 US drivers on the grid. And even
in Indy Lights, only 4 or 5 are in the grid.
The possible US hopeful from Indy Car who can run a
USF1 car would be JR Hildebrand. Everyone has shun
him since USF1 announced their 2010 entry. His name
was never mention. Everyone think it will be Jonathan
Summerton, Scott Speed, Danica Patrick, Kyle Busch,
Ryan Hunter-Reay among current drivers. But JR
should be on that list.
Gman
5th August 2009, 5:56
JLS, I have in fact heard JR mentioned by a few sources for the USF1 seat. I know he drove the last few A1GP races for Team USA this year when Marco was unavailable. If I am correct, he’s still young and coming up, so many people who were mentioning those drivers may not yet have heard of him. For sure he’ll be a talent to watch in the very near future.
Pertudit
11th August 2009, 19:40
Methinks you have the title wrong. Shouldn’t it be….
“Sebastien Bourdais’ troubles show why drivers shouldn’t go from a top team of one series to the dungheap of another”