Martin Brundle, at the 2005 San Marino GP wrote:You can sort of imagine in four or five years time talking about these guys we've got on the front two rows of the grid today, can't you? They're very much the future of Grand Prix Racing.
thehemogoblin, on giving a reason for reporting a particular post wrote:He Zsolted!!!
nigellamansell wrote:Chris Amon
Wizzie wrote:Alessandro Zanardi. He was faster than Michael Schumacher in a back-to-back test at Benetton but guess who had the race contract at the time?
f1-gast wrote:Lammers for sure.
And what about Sarrazine (or how to write)
Phoenix wrote:That's why I think it's better to stay out of F1 rather than in absolutely hopeless teams.
Aerond wrote:nigellamansell wrote:Chris Amon
How is Amon a F1 reject?
Klon wrote:Of course Eric Van De Poele, he musn't go unmentioned.
mario wrote:f1-gast wrote:Lammers for sure.
And what about Sarrazine (or how to write)
Stéphane Sarrazin? That's quite hard to tell, since he only ever drove in one race (which he retired from in dramatic fashion), and spent the rest of his time as Prost's test driver before switching to become Toyota's test driver in 2002. His career really doesn't lend itself well to analysis in terms of what he might have achieved, since we don't have a great amount of material to work from.
thehemogoblin, on giving a reason for reporting a particular post wrote:He Zsolted!!!
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:takagi_for_the_win wrote:Am I the only one that thinks Raikkonen/Montoya (McLaren 2005-06) had the potential to be absolutely beast?
Yes, because it had Juan Pablo Montoya.
Clint Bowyer at Richmond wrote:Thank you Juan Pablo (Montoya) for wrecking me, and then winning me the race!
Dan B wrote:Gorgio Pantano. Rather successful in the lower classes but when it came to F1 he did diddly squat.
Martin Brundle, at the 2005 San Marino GP wrote:You can sort of imagine in four or five years time talking about these guys we've got on the front two rows of the grid today, can't you? They're very much the future of Grand Prix Racing.
Shadaza wrote:Pedro Lamy also comes to mind.
f1-gast wrote:What about Esteban Tuero !!
My god what a talent, yes he was 19 year that;s why he should never leave formula 1 because of 2 accidents.
He deffently would beat Reutemann in the stats.
Martin Brundle, at the 2005 San Marino GP wrote:You can sort of imagine in four or five years time talking about these guys we've got on the front two rows of the grid today, can't you? They're very much the future of Grand Prix Racing.
Phoenix wrote:mario wrote:f1-gast wrote:Lammers for sure.
And what about Sarrazine (or how to write)
Stéphane Sarrazin? That's quite hard to tell, since he only ever drove in one race (which he retired from in dramatic fashion), and spent the rest of his time as Prost's test driver before switching to become Toyota's test driver in 2002. His career really doesn't lend itself well to analysis in terms of what he might have achieved, since we don't have a great amount of material to work from.
Stéphane Sarrazin had a very promising debut in F1. He qualified 17th or 18th, which was ahead of not only team mate Marc Gené (the regular driver who he outqualified by either 0.635s or 0.694s (the F1R profile and Stats F1 differ in this)), which was very good, ahead of the other Minardi, Takagi and perhaps de la Rosa as well (Zonta injured himself in a crash and did not take part in qualifying and Villeneuve's times were disallowed because of irregularities in the fuel). In the race, he was running 11th and very close to Villeneuve in the BAR when his crash happened. He definately deserved more time in F1 as a race driver.
ibsey wrote:Just been reading up on more examples to post here.
Firstly Perry McCarthy seems to be a prime candidate (just learnt he was the original inspiration for this entire website). In fact the Times labeled him "the world's unluckiest racing driver".
Franck Lagorce appears to have been rushed in F1 too early. His debut was actually Suzuka 1994 (in awful conditions) which couldn't have helped either, and he only did one race after that. Therefore I personally would have liked to see a bit more of him in F1 (a bit like Stéphane Sarrazin).
I've often wondered how Riccardo Zonta would have turned out if, he didn't injury his legs in Brazil 1999 (only his second F1 race weekend). The people at Mercedes, seemed to rate him extermely highly?
Finally, there is the story of Tommy Byrne. Although it has to be said, he didn't help his cause by apparently turning up to the Mclaren test, with two bird's - dressed in very short skirts & covered in make up - whom Tommy had just met the night before. Furthermore there is the rumor that Ron Dennis asked him what his thoughts were on R&D, to which Tommy replied, "R&D? What's that then?". But at least Tommy seemed to enjoy himself outside of F1 (boozing & drugs etc). Fair play to him.
mario wrote:he was a somewhat difficult character though - Ron Dennis refused to hire him because he thought that Byrne lacked focus and discipline. It's ironic that you mention the two girls that Byrne brought to the test, since that exacerbated Ron's negative assessment of Byrne's character - and, moreover, by Byrne's own confession he had too strong a penchant for the bottle and the wilder side of life, which again didn't exactly endear him to Ron Dennis.
dinizintheoven wrote:If only Tommy Byrne could have been a few years older, he might have had a shot at Hesketh when James Hunt moved on to the pre-Ronspeak McLaren.
dinizintheoven wrote:mario wrote:he was a somewhat difficult character though - Ron Dennis refused to hire him because he thought that Byrne lacked focus and discipline. It's ironic that you mention the two girls that Byrne brought to the test, since that exacerbated Ron's negative assessment of Byrne's character - and, moreover, by Byrne's own confession he had too strong a penchant for the bottle and the wilder side of life, which again didn't exactly endear him to Ron Dennis.
And yet, Ron would end up signing Kimi "vodka and strippers, kippis!" Räikkönen. If only Tommy Byrne could have been a few years older, he might have had a shot at Hesketh when James Hunt moved on to the pre-Ronspeak McLaren.
thehemogoblin, on giving a reason for reporting a particular post wrote:He Zsolted!!!
Phoenix wrote:dinizintheoven wrote:mario wrote:he was a somewhat difficult character though - Ron Dennis refused to hire him because he thought that Byrne lacked focus and discipline. It's ironic that you mention the two girls that Byrne brought to the test, since that exacerbated Ron's negative assessment of Byrne's character - and, moreover, by Byrne's own confession he had too strong a penchant for the bottle and the wilder side of life, which again didn't exactly endear him to Ron Dennis.
And yet, Ron would end up signing Kimi "vodka and strippers, kippis!" Räikkönen. If only Tommy Byrne could have been a few years older, he might have had a shot at Hesketh when James Hunt moved on to the pre-Ronspeak McLaren.
I believe Kimi didn't have that reputation back in 2002...
If those stories about Byrne are true, then I can understand why Ron Dennis didn't like him. Dennis was always a very professional man, and probably someone like Byrne was not mentally prepared to drive for a top F1 team, no matter how many talent he had. But I concede he deserved a bigger opportunity and some time to mature...
McDuck wrote:Jenson Button.
dr-baker wrote:I could be wrong, but Justin Wilson. Won F3000 title and in IndyCar in their equivalent of Minardi, but didn't match that expectation in an actual Minardi.
Also Anthony Davidson.
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:Tora Takagi. Always thought he was pretty good, he just only had access to crap cars (and he was even more mental than The Lord God Kamui). Jan Magnussen should get a mention too. He had a very temperamental Ford engine to put up with, and on the back of THAT F3 championship, he should have done better.
ibsey wrote:Wizzie wrote:Alessandro Zanardi. He was faster than Michael Schumacher in a back-to-back test at Benetton but guess who had the race contract at the time?
In order to kickstart a bit more of a discussion here (rather than this thread just turning into a list of names), can Alessandro Zanardi really claim the worst hard luck story in F1?
I mean he did get a whole year in a Williams which few other F1 rejects can claim to have enjoyed from their F1 time. I know that wasn't Williams's best season etc etc, but the chassis wasn't too bad. I mean Ralf (not quite the greatest F1 driver ever) scored a few podiums with it & without looking it up finished, i think, 5th in the championship. Yet, aside from a couple of promising showings at Spa & Monza, Zanardi did nothing with the car & (from memory) scored no points whatsoever.
Enforcer wrote:ibsey wrote:Wizzie wrote:Alessandro Zanardi. He was faster than Michael Schumacher in a back-to-back test at Benetton but guess who had the race contract at the time?
In order to kickstart a bit more of a discussion here (rather than this thread just turning into a list of names), can Alessandro Zanardi really claim the worst hard luck story in F1?
I mean he did get a whole year in a Williams which few other F1 rejects can claim to have enjoyed from their F1 time. I know that wasn't Williams's best season etc etc, but the chassis wasn't too bad. I mean Ralf (not quite the greatest F1 driver ever) scored a few podiums with it & without looking it up finished, i think, 5th in the championship. Yet, aside from a couple of promising showings at Spa & Monza, Zanardi did nothing with the car & (from memory) scored no points whatsoever.
I think 1999 after several years in Indy was too late for Zanardi to come back, it was just too much of learning curve to adapt to a different sort of car.
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