toonarmy wrote:I guess he was frolicking in the daisies when he won 6 of the first 7 races. Where was Rubens during those races?
Button was taking a clearly superior car and winning. He did his job well under little adversity.
And you're honestly comparing Barrichello to Button as a legitimate challenger to the No. 1 spot at Brawn? Come on.
Rubens is a 37-year-old F1 journeyman who never has been World Championship material. He's a solid pair of hands and a very good supporting cast teammate. That's it. Sure, he has 11 career victories, nine of which came in the dominant Ferraris of the early 2000s.
This isn't exactly Prost v. Senna or even Hamilton v. Alonso or Raikkonen v. Massa.
toonarmy wrote:What difference does it make when the races are won?
It doesn't, but it shows the measure of the driver if he can stack up to his rivals when they're in even or close-to-even cars. Button simply has not done that this season. He dominated when the Brawn had a clear edge in speed and reliability, which is, of course, what good drivers do. He also has benefited from having the best strategic mind on the pit wall, Ross Brawn.
But what's the best word to describe his performance in the second half when other teams have caught up? Ordinary.
A title is a title, but this certainly won't be one remembered for any kind of flair or dominance. So you're going to rank Button up there as a great champion without a victory in the second half of the season? With just one podium in the second half of the season? He's the next Prost?
Better yet, name me one signature, clutch drive the guy made this season that will be remembered like Alonso holding off Schumacher for 15 spellbinding laps at San Marino, Lewis destroying the field at Silverstone in the wet, Vettel steamrolling the field in a deluge at Monza or Massa winning with everything at stake at Interlagos. You can't. Maybe your legendary lad will come through with something memorable in the last two races, and I'll be the first to devour my hat if he does. Chances are, he'll just trundle around to fourth or fifth, get the necessary points and wear the crown.
Hell, Button hasn't produced a drive anywhere near as memorable or brilliant this season as his first career victory in Hungary. Better cars slid off the road all over that race, and Button kept his cool and drove a fantastic race to win.
toonarmy wrote:I won't even touch your comments trying to compare F1 to a spec series such as IndyCar. Reading that was good for a laugh, though.
Feel free to touch them. I'm all eyes.
A spec series doesn't allow a driver to take a dominant car and run away from the field for portions of the season, so you can laugh away. Penske and Ganassi have fought each other ferociously at every race this season, not just intermittently like the rivals in F1.
Sadly, the IndyCar Series has been a two-team hegemony this season, but those two teams have been landing lethal shots on each other at every race. And I'll put even money that either Dixon, Dario or Briscoe will win the finale at Homestead instead of just driving around, playing the cash-and-carry points game.
Take care,
PK
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