benmc wrote:
I really do believe that if the Sauber was so strong in that area, Kobayashi would've been able to pull off some similar performances. The Sauber has definitely been the kindest car to tyres since Pirelli entered the sport, but pretty much all evidence of that comes from Sergio's races.
True. Perez's best results in 2012:
Malaysia 2nd, Kobayashi was running 13th 60 seconds behind
Canada 3rd, Kobayashi 9th
Italy 2nd, Kobayashi 9th 40 second behind
Kobayashi
Spain 5th, Perez's race was already finished in first corner, when Grosjean punctured his tyre
Germany 4th, Perez 6th 5 second behind
Japan 3rd, Perez crashed out from 7th place
Kobayashi 6th, Perez caused collision running 3 positions ahead of Kobayashi
benmc wrote:
Perez failed to score in the last six but that wasn't all his fault. I don't think he became over-confident, but I do think he gained a 'nothing to lose' mentality which made him take risks he might not try otherwise. At least he was still fast. He dominated Kobayashi in qualifying towards the end of the season, and was running well in several races before he ran into trouble/bad luck.
Exactly. Maybe people don't know, but after Japan Kobayashi wasn't anywhere near Perez's pace. Outqualified in last 5 races, 0.5-1 second per lap slower than Perez in races. You would expect that podium in your home country would boost you, even if you learned you won't be driving for the same team next year, like "f**k you Sauber, I will show you made the wrong decision". Nothing like that happened, Kobayashi was barely mentioned, while Perez, for wrong or right reasons, was in a spotlight, because he was actually fighting.
benmc wrote:
The biggest problem for Sauber was that a lot of circuits towards the end of the season didn't favour Sauber. That car was only a frontrunner at fast, flowing tracks such as Catalunya, Silverstone, Spa and Suzuka. At other tracks, it was average at best, and at slow tracks like Hungary and Singapore, it was uncompetitive. Only Suzuka and possibly Austin fit into the 'fast, flowing' category, and their lack of pace in Austin indicates they may have fallen away in the development race.
At Austin Perez was running excellent 8th, while his teammate was 16th, until he run into brakes problem.
benmc wrote:
Junior formulae records mean nothing in F1. If they did, Jan Magnussen and Tommy Byrne would've been top racers, and Vettel would be nothing special. I'm not bashing Hulkenberg here by any means - He was truly exceptional in the last few races and has really proved me wrong. But we've yet to see him start a season as well as he can finish one. That should come with experience, but it's far too early to say he is the next star. He has the potential, just like Perez does, but I don't think either of them is the next Vettel, Alonso or Hamilton.
That's the only bit I disagree with

For my money Hulk and Perez will be as good as Alonso and Hamilton in a few years, but Hulk needs good car to show that, while Perez will need proper team to take care of his issues (hot head basically), because good car will be there. Add to that Grosjean, Bottas and maybe someone else, future is exciting
Overall great post benmc
