Gobsh!te, tweets like he drives, acts first, thinks later!
FairPlay for actually putting it out there that he was wrong
The guy's a genius driver. Just completely clueless when it comes to being PR and media savvy....no f**king wonder with XIX as his management team!
Love the way he totally owned Perez at turn 11. Give Serg a couple of years and he'll be up to pace, but I'll eat my hat, if out performs Button next year!
Everyone has been banging on about what a great season he's had, but he's only got 16 points more than Kobayashi and it's still unsure of whether or not Kamui will keep his drive.....f**king joke!
So He should stop tweeting... and save his best to the race track....
Absolutely.....But at the same time in regards to driving. I'd rather have a grid packed full of Hamilton's, Montoya's, Senna's, Kobayshi's, Alonso's....than all the other boring f**kwits driving at the minute!
It isn't their fault that they are boring. The cars that 16 of them drive are just too slow to keep up let alone compete with the top teams....
To an extent I agree, but five different constructors have won races this season. RBR, Mercedes, Mclaren, Ferrari and Williams. Sauber and Lotus have also come very close with 2nd's. So that proves the competition is there, for sure retirement and reliability have played a massive part in the outcomes of races, but mostly it's down to driver talent, otherwise there wouldn't be such gulfs in points between team mates. For example, Alonso 194pts, Massa 69pts. Vettel 190pts, Webber 134pts. Raikkonen 157pts, Grosjean 93pts. Rosberg 93pts, Schumacher 43pts. Hamilton 152pts, Button 131pts ( and that's with Hamilton's 4 retirements to Button's 1)
But if you truly know racing and can identify the willingness to leave all else behind in the quest to want to win, then you'd understand. Senna, Schumacher, Hamilton, Montoya, Kamui, Arnoux, Jim Clark....they would all do anything to get the win, push the boundaries, risk their own life constantly, all because the desire to win eclipsed every other emotional and rational thought. I don't think the same can be said for example of Aleisi, Ralf Schumacher, Berger, Vergne, Karthikayan, Massa, Raikonnen and alike....they'd all rather get home at the end of the day, than put everything on the line and win the race and for me that's what sets apart the special racers. You've only got to look at yesterday's race, Hamilton's 2nd pit stop, he left the exit lane and was side by side with Kimi going into the first turn, Kimi got his nose in front, but Hamilton simply didn't budge an inch of line and Kimi backed off....
....'he who dares Rodney, he who dares'