quoteAlonso leaves Ferrari By Mark Hughes on 5 October 2014 @SportmphMark
At Maranello on the Wednesday after Singapore, Fernando Alonso and Marco Mattiacci sat down for a meeting to discuss the future. Fernando went in there believing he held a strong hand. He, after all, had been flattering Ferrari’s form for years.
Widely perceived as the world’s number one, he was giving his all in the cockpit and just a few days earlier only the unlucky timing of a safety car prevented him from being the only vague threat to Lewis Hamilton’s much superior Mercedes. He had sacrificed some of the best years of his career to the service of the Scuderia which had consistently failed to provide him with a car to match the best.
Mattiacci, the corporate heavy, had other ideas about were the balance of power lay and that sotto voce exterior seems only the wrapping for a core of steel. As they took up their positions at the table, of the two men Mattiacci probably had a much clearer idea of exactly how this meeting was going to go. It’s said it was terminated by a furious Alonso telling the boss he was a son of a bitch and storming out.
In the aftermath it’s easy to imagine Mattiacci sitting calmly in his seat and allowing himself a wry smile of satisfaction. Why, he may even have picked the phone up in that very moment to Sebastian Vettel, told him the pre-contract he’d signed was ready now to be activated, that if he still wished to join he should begin making his arrangements.
At the Suzuka Circuit Hotel on Friday evening, Christian Horner went to Vettel’s room, as requested. The four-time world champion told him he would be leaving Red Bull at the end of the year. Horner had suspected this might be coming – and there was already a contingency plan in place.
So why had Mattiacci almost wilfully surrendered the services of F1’s best driver? He’d become tired of the waves he created internally. There are those who have worked at Ferrari during Alonso’s time there who swear he is not disruptive, that he makes his points but then withdraws. There are others who say that there was a honeymoon period of about a year where the driver immersed himself in the team and its people, but that his focus switched to himself in the wake of the lost title-decider of Abu Dhabi 2010.
Whatever, the waves created internally by Alonso’s remarks have frequently made life difficult for the management. His subtexts, the throwaway lines in public or to favoured journalists became all about how the team had let him down. He was the warrior pulling the team along in his wake – and they were being found wanting.
With a team being run one step removed by Luca di Montezemelo through a corporate lieutenant, that actually is how it was. Alonso was the centre of gravity of the team, its inspiration. But they were not devoted to him. His protective shell no longer allowed them in; he seemed to regard them with suspicion rather than respect.
But yet race after race he would perform magnificently, conjuring unlikely victories and podiums from unworthy machinery. No matter what the formula or car traits, his bullying magnificence in the cockpit would always find a way.
But the team was on the slide, no question. The days when Ross Brawn and Jean Todt held any corporate interference at bay and built up a lean, efficient racing unit were long gone. The grass was growing through the cracks – and Alonso’s greatest years were being lost to the blur of exhaust-blowing and entry speeds that was Vettel’s Red Bull.
And that’s just the way things were rolling – until the consistent under-achievement caused Fiat’s senior figures to turn their corporate heads Maranello way with question marks on their faces. From the moment Fiat’s Sergio Marchionne and John Elkann installed Mattiacci earlier this year di Montezemelo’s days were numbered.
Mattiacci though was an unknown quantity, with no racing background; difficult to read, given that his bland outward manner gave nothing away. But the signs are that he’s something of an operator. He’s been a significant part of freeing up the engine freeze – something that Ferrari needed help with – he’s smoothly taken up the reins in the wake of Montezemelo’s departure. And he’d clearly made his mind up about Alonso. He wanted an employee, not someone who made waves that were amplified by the Italian media.
So as he sat opposite his driver at Maranello the other Wednesday he said all the things that were guaranteed to rile someone of Alonso’s warrior disposition: we need more commitment from you, you need to understand that you do not run this team; I do. And no I’m not interested in increasing your salary to compensate for the absence of title-winning machinery. And Alonso exploded. He’d been played.
He’s a truly brilliant driver, a non-stop freight train of competitive will. But just as with the blackmail attempt on Ron Dennis in the wake of Hungary 2007, he’d misjudged his opponent. And in his frustration he’s now on his way out of a team that has every chance of fielding a much improved car next year. It will be the first overseen by James Allison – who has been given carte blanche by Mattiacci to do what’s needed.
A big chunk of the necessary improvement in the power unit is easily reachable in that this one was deliberately – but misguidedly – conceived around an extreme solution to minimising heat rejection, at the expense of power. It’s a car that will quite conceivably be good enough for Vettel to win races in – and the perception will be that Seb’s been able to do what Alonso could not.
Fernando meanwhile has the option of going to McLaren, with his old adversary Ron Dennis – strange what competitive need will forgive, on both sides. At the time of writing the contract had not been signed. But it had been prepared.
Whatever Alonso’s career statistics turn out to be, they are going to sell his wonderful talent short. But in the round, they will reflect a combination of that talent with a lack of nuance to his thinking, his one-dimensional way of demanding what is required. It pisses off those in a position of influence over his destiny – and that’s not smart.
"Walk on, through the wind, Walk on, through the rain, Though your dreams be tossed and blown. Walk on, walk on with hope in your heart, And you'll never walk alone, YOU`LL NEVER WALK ALONE!!!"
Quote: WHATEVER wrote in post #64News that we Kimi fans have been waiting for since forever. Finally the media (and Ferrari) realizes what we've been saying all along!
So if Ferrari, McLaren and Red Bull are out of the question, where will Alonso go?
Knowing the size of his ego, I put my bet on a sabbatical to wait for a team that needs him desperately for 2016 to put up with his tantrums.
I think you mean Ferrari, mercedes, and red bull.
His only choice of a "competitive" car at this juncture is McLaren. And even they carry a question mark. I've been doing a little digging lately and the perception is Honda is behind in their preparations. Of course we won't know this for sure until the new engine supplier meets its constructor, possibly as early as the Abu Dhabi test.
Someone mentioned it before: Alonso is likely interested in a short term contract with McLaren. Which makes perfect sense for the samurai. If the Honda-McLaren package don't work out, this would give Alonso the option to possibly move. Even then, I think his only option would be Mercedes. Red Bull seem committed to their young driver program under Horner's leadership. Ferraris doors are slammed shut and the key is thrown away. His only hope is one of the Mercedes drivers to become too disgruntled to want to remain with the team if he fancies another WDC before retirement.
We have a common saying in America: don't bite the hand that feeds you. Maybe it's a lesson Alonso hasn't learned. But I believe he is an individual who shows ruthlessness in the track and can't shut that frame of mind off when he removes his racing helmet. And that may be his biggest deterrent to winning another title.
But I thought McLaren already said no to his one-year-contract he was asking
Maybe they are still negotiating?
Well, to tell you the truth, I also think he should leave F1 and never come back. Yes, he's a very good driver, but I just can't stand all the rest about him. And, as I can see, there are a lot of teams now that think the same.
Quote: WHATEVER wrote in post #68But I thought McLaren already said no to his one-year-contract he was asking
Maybe they are still negotiating?
Some journalists have all ready said that a deal between Alonso and McLaren is done. It's really his only option, as I mentioned before. Unless he wants to "sacrifice" a year and hope for a better seat. McLaren want commitment from Alonso for longer than one year. And Alonso only wants one. That is the only hang up.
Mercedes door is shut. They are retaining Rosberg and Hamilton.
I think Alonso, for the first time in his life, will have to accept what others want for now on. McLaren is his only option if he wants to be considered for a top team in 2016. I don't think the top teams will be eager to take him after a sabbatical. He may consider himself an F1 legend but he's just 6 or 8 months younger than Kimi, so he will not have the upperhand after a sabbatical.
He's going into the unknown at MLaren Honda, plus all the other things one has to go through in a new team. And if he does accept at least a two year deal in McLaren he is obliged to drive that car as a Maniac if he wants to still be hired by a top team in 2017 at 35-36 years old.
Quote: WHATEVER wrote in post #71I think Alonso, for the first time in his life, will have to accept what others want for now on. McLaren is his only option if he wants to be considered for a top team in 2016. I don't think the top teams will be eager to take him after a sabbatical. He may consider himself an F1 legend but he's just 6 or 8 months younger than Kimi, so he will not have the upperhand after a sabbatical.
He's going into the unknown at MLaren Honda, plus all the other things one has to go through in a new team. And if he does accept at least a two year deal in McLaren he is obliged to drive that car as a Maniac if he wants to still be hired by a top team in 2017 at 35-36 years old.
probably not the first - McLaren 2007
Nomad, you're the rider so mysterious Nomad, you're the spirit that men fear in us
one must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star - it's a satanic drug thing you wouldn't understand...
They ask Kimi what he think of Seb to Ferrari. You know his normal answer is :"I don´t care!" Look what he answered
quoteRaikkonen: Vettel will bring a good atmosphere to Ferrari
Kimi Raikkonen has admitted it would be nice if he is paired at Ferrari with Sebastian Vettel for the 2015 season, and believes the quadruple world champion will g=create a good atmosphere in the Maranello squad.
The Finn said in Russia that he has heard the same reports as the rest of the Formula 1 paddock — that outgoing world champion Vettel’s Red Bull exit means he is replacing Fernando Alonso at Maranello in 2015.
Although he has under performed this season, Raikkonen has a contract to stay at Ferrari next year, and told media at Sochi, “I don’t know if he (Vettel) is coming to the team. There are a lot of reports, people expect it to happen, but I don’t know yet.”
"He is my closest friend among the drivers, a very honest and straightforward guy. I’ve never worked with him, but he’s four-time world champion, he is certainly good in every area. We’ll see how everything goes,” Raikkonen, the 2007 world champion, added.
“It would be nice if he would come,” said Raikkonen. “I think it will bring a good atmosphere to the team.”
“I hope that together, if he does come, we can achieve good results. But I don’t know anything. Like you, I just read about it in the news,” he insisted.
Ferrari and Vettel have yet to confirm their plans for 2015, although in the wake of the announcement that he would be departing Red Bull at the end of the season expectations were that his destination in 2015 would be Maranello. (GMM)