Maybe that should be Dennis v Whitmarsh.
It's very interesting to me that both recent leaving drivers have heaped praise on Whitmarsh whilst hinting at darker figures in the background. There have also been numerous hints at this from other sources, anonymous or otherwise.
I too had noticed Lewis seeming very, very keen to insist to the press that he had only positive things to say about Martin and that he was in no way a factor for his leaving, as if there might be such blame elsewhere. I think there is quite a lot to suggest that at the very least Whitmarsh and Dennis were/are at odds over the reasons for Hamilton leaving, even in the versions for the split presented to the press.
Ron Dennis, Nov 2012:
Obviously the media thinks there's some issue between Lewis and I - there's absolutely no issue between us. Sometimes the circumstances in a relationship don't balance, don't match. We're a team that requires a lot out of a driver and if some other team is able to make a more attractive proposition in any shape or form then it's understandable that your driver's going to move. [...]
It's important that everybody in the team is there for the right reasons, is focused, is determined to win and determined to make all sacrifices that are necessary to win.
(Source: http://www1.skysport.../12479/8259451)
Gets less circumspect a couple of months later, January 2012:
'I think it's wrong to portray that Lewis left this team,' said Dennis in an interview with CBI Magazine.
'I am a realist. Did we have the ability to create a situation where we could have stayed together? Categorically, yes. Would that have been the right thing to do? We didn't think so.'
(Source: http://www.dailymail...on-Dennis.html)
And Autosport 2013:
Last year I didn't seriously seek to prevent his efforts to explore new pastures with the Mercedes AMG F1 team...
Ron Dennis has been pretty consistent in his presentation - McLaren took the opportunity to let Lewis Hamilton leave because they didn't want to keep him anyway.
Now, let's look at what his team principal had to say. In September 2012...
“I know we made [Hamilton] a very, very big financial offer, bigger than I believe any Formula One driver is enjoying today,” he said. “We went a long way to make a good offer to Lewis but ultimately it takes two to get to a signature. We clearly didn’t agree terms and we’ve moved in a different direction.”
(source: http://www.telegraph...-Mercedes.html)
November 2012:
“The offer that we made was higher I believe than any driver in Formula 1 is currently receiving or will receive next year, ” he said.
He added: “I think Lewis is a top-flight driver. We didn’t underestimate his attractiveness to others in Formula 1. We knew Lewis would be in demand, that’s why we made him an offer.
“I think it was a good offer but there clearly we had to look at the alternatives because we recognised that there was a serious threat.”
“We put a lot of effort into trying to keep Lewis. He’s clearly a great asset to any race team. So we made a big effort. I think ultimately Lewis had to make a decision, he made one, and we must now look forward.”
(source: http://www.jamesalle...nd-flex-wings/)
And, same month:
"We'd have him back, yes," Whitmarsh told Rachel Brookes. "So let's hope it's just a gap year."
(source: http://www1.skysport...ust-a-gap-year)
Martin's position has also been consistent. McLaren tried its very to keep him but ultimately they couldn't afford him. Then you have Lewis and Mercedes denying that money was the reason for the move anyway, just to muddy the waters a little more, but that's a little beside the point. The point is not whether which version is the correct one, the point is when you have the Chairman and Team Principal apparently unable to agree on a story to stick to over it, I wonder about deep disagreements at the top over the direction of the team. Even more so when things like this are written, in the context of McLaren denying an AMuS story over him being demoted to non-executive chairman as a result of McLaren Automotive losing money.
There are also claims Dennis has tried to oust Martin Whitmarsh as principal of the F1 team and regain that position himself.
Dennis insisted to BBC Sport that was all "categorically untrue"
(source: http://www.bbc.co.uk...a-one/22307813) )
The odd thing about that one is I keep my ear pretty close to the ground on McLaren stuff, being a fan of the team and I'd never seen this rumour referred to in print before so in denying the story, they actually brought it to a lot of people's attention. So no, I think the Daily Mail is pretty odious but I'm not going to dismiss their story out of hand. It's pretty sad - as I said in the 'Whitmarsh Out?' thread a while back, Ron Dennis is a hero to me, but I do sometimes wonder if he's turned into more of a problem for the team in recent years rather than the astonishing asset that took McLaren to their former dizzying heights.