QUOTE (Archybald @ Jul 22 2010, 08:11)

Thats a very simple thing to say and can be said about anyone on the grid or just in day to day life. Humans are the sum of their experiences.
I think it's unfair on Jenson to make out that he's worse than Heikki, who in my opinion is a top 10 driver. Button is top 5. Heikki is undoubtedly a little quicker than Jense over a lap, but I would back Jenson to finish ahead on points - like he did against Trulli in his third season when Trulli generally whipped him in qualy - every time over an entire season by means of his better race pace, overtaking, race craft and reading of the race.
Even Jenson's one race day weak point - his defending ability - is not a weakness as against Heikki as the Finn is arguably even more of a soft touch. Ultimately the most disappointing thing about Heikki was his lack of that
sisu which characterized the earlier "holy trinity" of Finnish F1 stars: Rosberg, Hakkinen and Raikkonen. He lacked fighting spirit and would seemingly just give up and allow himself to be overtaken by slower cars far too often. You can blame McLaren all you want for consistently fuelling him more heavily than Hamilton. But was it the team's fault that he almost invariably went backwards in the races?
My view is that there's far too much money in sport in general and certainly in F1 so that guys like Heikki - who was lucky enough to have signed his contract when the current global economic problems were just a looming threat on the horizon rather than an actual fact and consequently was on a retainer that was at least half as much again as Jenson is now on - enter a false comfort zone and start mailing in their performances. Rosberg Sr would have been happy with bread and water and his expenses covered and for that he would have left everything on the track after every race. Multimillionaire tax exile Heikki found it easy enough to give up once he realized he was never going to beat Lewis.
Button knows he won't either - at least on pure ability -, but he's most certainly NOT given up. Rather, he's hanging around, hanging in there, making up for his qualy shortcomings by driving really well on Sundays, hoping that something - bad luck, unreliability, penalties - will turn up and give him back in a couple of races what he's lost over the past five. And in F1, something generally does turn up. But on balance that "something" is slightly more likely to happen to the guy who's back in the pack - albeit whilst dicing with excellent drivers like Rosberg and Kubica who rarely make contact with others - than to his teammate who's fighting with the faster Red Bulls. Even when you factor in that both Webber and Vettel are more contact prone, it's safer to be higher up the grid. But let's see how it all pans out.....