23. Heikki Kovalainen (Lotus)
A bit of a squandered opportunity
for Heikki as he replaced Kimi Raikkonen for the final two races of the year.
One Q3 appearance and two dreadful starts didn’t make the impression he wanted.
22. Max Chilton (Marussia)
It was a solid rookie year, in
fact he finished all the races which is something a first year driver has never
done before. It still doesn’t stop me wanting to put him last as mostly he
finished there and was completely trounced by his team mate Jules Bianchi. The
most infuriating thing was the likes of the BBC and Sky making excuses for him; even though he did improve as the year went on if he finds himself with a seat next year it’s another poor reflection on F1
that money talks just a bit too much.
21. Giedo van der Garde (Caterham)
There was a perception that van
der Garde was being dominated by Pic as much as Chilton was by Bianchi but that
was not the case at all. He was outstanding in the wet qualifying of Belgium
and actually out-qualified Pic 10-9 over the season. Deserves another year as
he seemed to be getting better.
20. Charles Pic (Caterham)
It is of course very difficult to
judge the drivers from the newer teams as they were consistently about a second
off even the slowest of the midfield runners. So despite his qualifying against
van der Garde the fact that Pic was leading 8-4 when both Caterhams finished
the races showed that Pic had it when it counted this year.
19. Esteban Gutierrez (Sauber)
Out in Q1 10 times isn’t exactly
a great advertisement for future job prospects. But in truth his first year
while patchy wasn’t that bad in my eyes at least. Admittedly he had trouble
putting an entire weekend together but when looked at closely he often wasn’t
that far off his highly thought of team mate Nico Hulkenberg. The second half
was when he really came alive when Sauber made the car more driveable, while
his seventh place in Japan was a fantastic drive.
Again with the lack of
testing in F1 at the moment, he deserved at least one more year which Sauber obliged by not employing a barely born but rich Russian Sergey Sirotkin.
18. Pastor Maldonado (Williams)
After 2012’s heroics Williams
produced a dog of a car which left dear Pastor frustrated. It didn’t help that
his rookie team mate was consistently out qualifying him. His race experience
told on Sundays when he more often than not finished in front but his criticism
of Williams when he knew he was leaving was poor and his single point for the
year was equally so. His move to Lotus next year is defined by money even though on his day he can compete with the best.
17. Adrian Sutil (Force India)
Sutil made quite the comeback in Australia after
being away for a year with a spectacular performance that rather overshadowed his
team mate Paul di Resta. It’s strange that for the majority of the year Sutil
lingered behind di Resta and didn’t have nearly as many highlight showings, but
Sutil is still the one with the higher profile and by the looks of it the one
to stay in Formula as he’s signed for Sauber. He’s a good solid driver, but
despite the odd standout showing, he’s never going to give you that spark every
race.
all photo's taken from autosport.com
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