
In two months (60 days) my calendar says we'll be starting over. Here are some thoughts to start a conversation -- if anyone is out there, like me, waiting for the pictures from the new launches and thinking how little Daytona really matters:
Remember all that blather about how Virgin was going to ‘change everything’ by relying on Computers to design their car? Ha. Ha. And remember all Bernie E.’s nonsense about how Cosworth could actually be competitive? Well, the Virgin has disappeared from sight (and Mr. Branson with her?) and the Cozzies are pushing around movable chicanes at the bottom of the list.
Some things don’t change no matter what the zillionaire’s say. To build a racing team capable of winning you need more than mere money, you need to know what to buy with it, as Red Bull owner Dietrich Mateschitz so nicely illustrates: the best designers, the best team managers and the best drivers. Period.
So Ferrari has one of the very best drivers; so what? their other driver is way out of his depth. I think in a fair contest Fernando could take Jenson, Lewis and Webbo --and maybe even Seb and Kimi into the bargain. No one else is in the running with Kubica in hospital.
Shuey’s over the hill and Rosberg hasn’t delivered on early promise. If the people at Mercedes put a car under him this year though, he might do as Jenson finally did when he got a competitive machine. It would be fun to see --but it ain’t likely, even with Ross’s genius in the pits. Mercedes is just too tight with their money; I wouldn't be surprised to see them withdraw at the end of this season.
McLaren gave Red Bull as much of a run as anyone could last year but the numbers show how truly uneven the contest was. Seb won eleven races and between them, Lewis & Jenson only won 6. If they start well this year, we could see a real contest for both titles, but I don’t see anything like true dominance coming out of Woking.
Maranello? Well, I’m a fan. I love the red cars and I was in pig heaven during Michael and Ross Braun’s great run, but as noted above, all they have is one driver, no designer and zero team management. It will be another tragic year for the tifosi and Fernando will have to take whatever consolation he can from the fact that Jenson, too, made a similar fatal decision in his career: exchanging money for competitiveness.
It’ll be another year, then, for Vettel and Adrian. We’ll just have to get used to smiley faces, I guess.


Jim Watt