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29 Nov 2022, 14:24 (Ref:4135427) | #76 | |||||
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If Joe is correct (the problem is empowerment and meddling from above), does anyone really think the odds are high that if they just swap anyone else into that role without other changes is going to do a substantially better job than Binotto? Richard |
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29 Nov 2022, 16:00 (Ref:4135443) | #77 | |||
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29 Nov 2022, 16:34 (Ref:4135450) | #78 | ||
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The team was making too many mistakes and you can’t fire everyone (that would be ridiculous) so you have to find one person to take the fall…and in fairness it’s not like, if given more time, Binotto could have turned things around (more so if you believe the culture at Ferrari is to political and never changing)…so either way he’s the one who had to go and deservedly so right?
Shame they couldn’t demote/reassign him and use him where his real talents are? A significant loss of institutional knowledge and experience. The team will be worse off for it and next year is back to an organizational rebuild. |
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29 Nov 2022, 16:50 (Ref:4135452) | #79 | |||
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This point was mentioned in this article I and others posted earlier in this thread. https://racingnews365.com/binottos-f...full-backstory Quote:
Richard |
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29 Nov 2022, 16:56 (Ref:4135455) | #80 | |
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Lastly... Binotto might have saved his job (or at least felt backed by his bosses) if he had done his own restructuring and then let a few head roll. But then again, he would just be doing what his bosses are doing. Maybe Binotto felt that even if it put a target on himself, that blaming various people below him in some type of public bloodbath to sooth the Tifosi might not actually fix things. So instead of blaming someone else he allowed himself to be sacrificed?
If I were him. I would probably try to walk a fine line between addressing root causes (not sexy for the press or Tifosi) and some level of "making noise" (i.e. "head will roll") about fixing things. I really don't follow Ferrari, but it just seems like all we heard from them was... not much? Or maybe the press only wanted to keep the blood stirred in the water so they focused on showing them all in clown outfits. Richard |
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29 Nov 2022, 17:12 (Ref:4135457) | #81 | ||
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1988 Fiat take 90% stake, the old man passes away 1989 TP is Fiorio 1991 TP is Lombardi, di Montezemolo becomes president 1992 TP is Ghedini 1993 TP is Todt (Schumacher era begins) 1995 Binotto arrives 2008 TP is Domenicali 2004 LdM becomes chair of Fiat 2009 Fiat buy a stake in the bankrupt Chrysler 2010 LdM is deposed by Elkann at Fiat, remains at Ferrari 2014 LdM resigns from Ferrari after apparent disagreements with Marchionne, head of FCA, Felisa becomes president 2014 Fiat wholly own Chrysler, announce intention to split Ferrari out of FCA group, TP is Mattiacci 2015 Ferrari spun out, 90% owned by Fiat, TP is Arrivabene 2016 Felisa steps down and Marchionne takes over 2016 Fiat sell remaining share to investors and public, 10% remain with the family 2018 Marchionne departs and is replaced by Elkann (chair) & Camilleri (CEO) 2019 TP is Binotto 2020 Camilleri departs, replaced by Elkann (temporarily) 2021 Vigna becomes CEO, Elkann remains chair 2023 TP is ??? And we wonder why the decision making process within the F1 team is so fraught? There's your answer - from 1991 to 2010 it was Luca di Montezemolo at the top, and for a large chunk of that period Todt was TP, followed by Domenicali. Lovely and stable at the top, unchanging, solid. Prior to that and since then it's been deckchair rearranging of Titanic proportions. |
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29 Nov 2022, 18:51 (Ref:4135466) | #82 | ||
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And let’s not forget the hundreds of employees let go or reassigned as the team adapted to life under the budget cap.
Possible that key staff, sound minds in the race strategy dept for example, were let go already? |
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29 Nov 2022, 22:21 (Ref:4135491) | #83 | |
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LeClerc and Sainz must be feeling a bit non-plussed, Domenicali seemed ok to an ordinary fan (me) Arrivabene less so. Binotto has been an important part of Ferrari for 20+ years. It's rumoured his boss interfered with tragedy sorry strategy this year.
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29 Nov 2022, 23:45 (Ref:4135495) | #84 | ||
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I feel for Binotto as he seems a thoroughly decent and capable man, who understands that problems take time to address - need to fully understand root cause and then address it (as we've seen also with Benz this year). The various others either commenting on Ferrari or part of the structure wanted something "quick & dirty" though and the pressure was on Mr Binotto.
Don't know whether he was pushed or left of his own volition but he's probably much better out of there and gets his life back. It is likely that him leaving will have a big impact on Ferrari in 2023 - not in a good way. At the very least, getting someone else up to speed will take time. Personally, I'd really like Ferrari to be genuinely competitive (as they have been on many occasions this year) but in reality, that has only happened in the last 40 or so years when they had the "dream team" there for a few years. |
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30 Nov 2022, 03:07 (Ref:4135504) | #85 | ||
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I cant see Horner leaving RB to go to Ferrari.
WDC, WCC , 2 brilliant drivers at their peak. The drivers, team owners and managers all love him Lifes good at the bull. TP for Ferrari must be one of the stressiest jobs in F1. Everyone is ready to attack you for any misstep. Nothing is good enough for the Tifosi which is nearly the entire Ital ian population and media. Binotto only took over as boss in 2019, when the team were nowhere, not able to compete. In 3 years he reshaped it and got it to 2nd with 4 wins and some poles this year. Thats no small thing. he deserves credit Yes there were a LOT of bungles about strategy on race weekend, that probably cost them a championship, and he has to wear that too. Is he the pit strategist on race day? While ultimately he bears responsibility, we need to look at whoever it was on the pit wall making the final pit/tyre etc lap by lap instant decisions |
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30 Nov 2022, 06:41 (Ref:4135511) | #86 | |||
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30 Nov 2022, 06:54 (Ref:4135513) | #87 | ||
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I guess technically it's correct.
He resigned from all positions on 21 July, and sadly passed away on the 25th.... Back to the topic - there is definitely more going on behind the scenes than just Binotto's position at Ferrari. The recent resignation of the entire board of directors at Juventus (including Maurizio Arrivabene) is probably not entirely coincidental to Binotto's resignation. Exor has a big turmoil on its hands that is larger than just Ferrari - and the Financial Accounts Probe ordered by the Italian Football Federation, which indicated "astonishing" signs of corruption, will be of huge concern. If (I stress IF) there is anything that comes to light in Ferrari's finances at the next round of FIA audits, then Exor will have an even bigger problem on their hands. I'll repeat - the issues at the top of the Scuderia Ferrari hierarchy are bigger and go further than just F1 at the moment. |
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30 Nov 2022, 08:24 (Ref:4135519) | #88 | |
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30 Nov 2022, 10:12 (Ref:4135535) | #89 | |
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Binotto seemed alright when he first took over, but this season has shown he doesn't seem to cope with the pressure of fighting for the title. Too many bad strategy calls made Max's job easier. They need someone in who can make the right decisions under pressure, although who that is I don't know
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30 Nov 2022, 10:26 (Ref:4135540) | #90 | ||
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30 Nov 2022, 12:00 (Ref:4135556) | #91 | |||
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30 Nov 2022, 12:08 (Ref:4135558) | #92 | |
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30 Nov 2022, 12:08 (Ref:4135559) | #93 | ||
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Why are some people trying to suck out all the joy of this tremendous site by attempting to constantly prove their point by always responding to what is an perfectly obvious statement? It's almost the equivalent of people insisting that they must have the last word, no matter how ridiculous their response is. Does it give them so much satisfaction?
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30 Nov 2022, 12:15 (Ref:4135560) | #94 | |||
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30 Nov 2022, 13:21 (Ref:4135568) | #95 | |||
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30 Nov 2022, 14:47 (Ref:4135581) | #96 | ||
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Lets settle down here. As with all things Italian emotions can run high, and has lots of arm waving. Respond to comments in posts, not take jabs - veiled or otherwise - at the person who posted them. Last edited by ScotsBrutesFan; 30 Nov 2022 at 17:12. |
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1 Dec 2022, 19:30 (Ref:4135762) | #97 | |||
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Ferrari making Binotto's position untenable puts me in mind of Ferrari attempting to do the same with Jean Todt in 1996. I don't think it is helpful. Quote:
https://www.grandprix.com/news/press...ari-again.html |
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1 Dec 2022, 21:12 (Ref:4135778) | #98 | ||
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Richard |
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1 Dec 2022, 23:22 (Ref:4135786) | #99 | ||
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2 Dec 2022, 09:44 (Ref:4135820) | #100 | |
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I just never got the impression Binotto could step up when it counted and take control. He seemed too often to do nothing when something needed doing.
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