They need to: 1) get a leader in the top spot; 2) sort out the tactics; 3) sort out the technical mess they are in. To not have the modelling and real performance correlating is really worrying. Either they have some school boy error or there is some fundamental issues. As so much is/ can be simulated these days and with the cost cap coming; any team that hasn’t got this sorted is screwed.
4) Stop firing people who then go working at Mercedes and give away all the tricks Binotto too already had an offer there before Arrivabene “badly left”
I think that would raise a wry smile from him. Not in a million years will SF hire him, stepneygate ? This correlation issue is wearing thin, they supposedly had this years ago, so if it is legitimate then the whole aero team need sacking. even SF must of figured out by now that all the engineers that have left have done a good job elsewhere, so its internal.......period
Sure and put Dracula in charge of a young girls convent school Seriously he is Darth Vader Voldemort, the antichrist of the Scuderia....I don't think he would want it for having hated Ferrari during the 8o's 90's neither should they want him.. What I dislike for the most is that he singlehandedly gave the entire paddock a detestable cold unfriendly atmosphere in his humorless all out war with Ferrari. Now F1 is friendly there is a great atmosphere great banter between the drivers...I like it a lot better.
Wild card time. How about somebody from outside of F1 but who knows how to win big in other sports. Such as: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Brailsford I have no particular interest in cycling but this guy knows how to win. Yes, he was involved in an unproven doping scandal, but Binotto was involved in a proven fuel flow scandal, so lets not get moralistic. Plus, as having the press on your back is part of the SF TP job, he knows a bit about it. After all team leadership doesn't necessitate and deep knowledge of F1, race driving or engineering. It means knitting together people who do have that knowledge, and getting them to perform. That was Brawn's real strength after all.
That's reminds me how Benetton gambled when they took Flavio Briatore out of a marketing position to make him manager of the F1 team they just bought. Alledgedly Briatore had no racing experience background at all, and once boasted never having attended a motor race of any sort before getting the job! Apparently chosen to sort out the dodgy finances after the purchase from Toleman, he took to F1 like a duck to water and got Benetton with 2 titles before long. In an interview, Briatore said that knowing nothing about F1 was an advantage because he had no preconceived idea about running a team. He just applied in F1 the business approach that made him successful in the Benetton empire. Maybe Ferrari should recruit a confirmed manager from a different field who don't speak Italian so can totally ignore the media.
Jean Todt after he retires from the FIA. After his appointment by Montezemolo he spearheaded the rebuild of the Scuderia from scratch brought all the right people in and voila more titles than at any other era of Ferrari. When I see him at events he takes everything in he does not miss anything. He could come in just as a consultant and give his review, recommendations to what's his name the new CEO on who to let go, who to hire what to restructure etc.
Arrivabene was a bully who tried to intimidate people, my colleague journalists in particular, he was like a mini Putin in not wanting any communication when he had nothing positive or fabricated to say...and he was NOT competent, he ruled by fear and so people dared do nothing. Not constructive at all. Binotto (Swiss not Italian by the way) is a great engineer but yes we need a team boss a la Todt Brawn Horner Wolf above him so he can concentrate on the tech side. Whatever went on with fuel flow last year happened because he was too busy to manage this and stop the wrongdoing, he was overwhelmed by all his duties and it...sort of happened that is no good.
Wasn't bozo in charge of engine development when they developed the first version of the V6 hybrid which was a total failure (turbo too small)?
How about bringing Ross Brawn back? He's done it all already and sold his own team to Mercedes and now retired... What a better challenge than to come back and rebuild Scuderia Ferrari? There's nothing in retirement that could be more fun and challenging and rewarding than that and if he gets it done he will increase his legendary status even more... Mattia can stay and go back to doing engineering work
Sounds like the reputation, but he was an old school racer who worked his way up and made a career for himself as a mechanic, then as a top notch race team manager, before the McLaren opportunity came to pass. I've heard about many of the stories about his eccentricities, and I doubt he'd be much fun from an employee standpoint. But despite all that, he ran the team that challenged the Scuderia successfully for many years. I would think Enzo would have appreciated that tenacity, even while doing everything possible to beat it. C'mon, he might take it on just to spite his former peers now retired.
This is Ferrari's problem. there is no clear leader. as for Sunday- Leclerc got to excited and made a mistake... Binotto cant be held for that.... but he can be held on why they were fighting for 10th and 11th place in qualifying.. when they had 4 months AFTER first testing to make the car better... however I'm for stability vs. change. I don't know who else would go in to Ferrari and really make any difference - that would be a 2-3 year building process.
Matias Binotto at risk of dismissal, as reported by Corriere della Sera, the senior management of Ferrari would already be considering possible substitutes, the most valid option at the moment seems to be Antonello Coletta, current manager of GT competitions. https://www.oasport.it/2020/07/f1-mattia-binotto-a-rischio-licenziamento-gp-ungheria-quasi-decisivo-la-ferrari-pensa-al-sostituto-2/
Don't worry Mattia, I'm sure Mercedes would be happy to have you, as they continue to hire practically everyone Ferrari fires.
So, they wouldn't demote him to his previous technical position, they would actually sack him? Not exactly confidence building for whoever inherit the job, is it?