Good for Hamilton – but where was Massa?

After the soap-opera of Saturday’s qualifying, it was nice to see the Hungarian Grand Prix come down to simple head-to-head driving. Yes, of course the track is hard to pass on – but not impossible, as Alonso showed early on. All of the top four (Hamilton, Raikkonen, Heidfeld and Alonso) drove well.
Which leaves Massa. OK, starting 14th is nobody’s idea of a good time, but the great drivers would accept it as a challenge and fight their way up the field. Instead, Massa spent a lot of his time stuck behind third-tier drivers like Sato, and he never looked competitive. More to the point, he didn’t look like a championship contender. Success in racing depends on driving skill, intelligence, physical fitness, and temperament. And is it merely coincidence that as soon as Michael Schumacher leaves the team, Ferrari starts to stumble, both operationally and technically? (Actually, I think Ross Brawn‘s “sabbatical” may be more significant.)