Felipe Massa considers life after Williams

By Rodney Gordon / Expert

After speculating that Daniil Kvyat was headed to Williams after being demoted from Red Bull, the mere rumour that Felipe Massa is entertaining a move to another team is too tempting not to make a comment.

Not that I’m patting myself on the back, far from it. Kvyat has been wayward and unruly since returning to Toro Rosso, even when he’s not retiring.

As I’ve also mentioned in this column, Williams aren’t exactly setting the world on fire this season, so his string of P5-P8 finishes is laudable.

Recently however, teammate Valtteri Bottas has had the wood on this teammate, either edging him out in the minor points places or putting a gap on Massa and finishing a few positions clear, punctuated clearly with the team’s only podium finish this season in Canada.

You could argue that Sergio Perez was fortunate to score a few podium finishes, but the fact that the Mexican is currently splitting the Williams drivers in the championship only affirms that there is a divide between the two.

So where is the 35-year old rumoured to headed?

“I don’t want to put names down because I don’t think that is really the right thing to do,” Massa is reported to have told French website f1i.com.

“But not a small team, so maybe teams like the ones I raced for but maybe also teams that are pushing to be better.”

So that rules out all the teams that aren’t pushing to be better, which isn’t too many.

“I’m not here to be in the back of the field and just not enjoying myself,” explained Massa. “I’m not ready for that.”

This comment from the Brazilian is far more telling. His chances of progressing to one of the front-running teams (i.e. replacing Rosberg at Mercedes or Raikkonen at Ferrari) are virtually nil. Furthermore, he doesn’t want to drive for a backmarker team like Sauber or Manor.

Similarly it’s unfathomable that a seat at Toro Rosso would be available, which leaves four possibilities.

Renault might be sitting in ninth place in the championship, but have already shifted their development efforts to their 2017 car. Neither driver, Kevin Magnussen or Jolyon Palmer have performed especially well, and there’s no guarantee that either will retain their seat.

Haas surprised everyone with some early form this season, but as their competitors fine-tuned their performance they were left in the dust. Although they’ve proven to be a highly organised and ambitious team, they are still green and a few years away from truly cementing themselves in the mid-field.

Force India could be an interesting move for Massa, and certainly I’ve put the kiss of death on them to beat Williams in the championship. They are the very definition of a team that’s pushing to be better, and if Massa has deemed Williams as a team worthy of his talents, then why not join the team that’s rapidly closing the gap on them?

The final option, and in my opinion the most likely, would see Massa take up a seat at McLaren.

I’m not particularly swayed by the suggestion that Jenson Button will return to Williams, the team with which he made his debut. However, if he leaves to join another team or retires I can see Massa slotting in alongside his old chum Fernando Alonso and racing in a low-pressure environment while the team rebuilds.

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-07T22:17:47+00:00

Trent Price

Roar Guru


If that's true then 90% of the grid at Silverstone 2008 should have retired on the spot - likewise Donington 1993. But then Barrichello put in a blinder there too and faced the same darts and arrows towards the end of his F1 career that Massa now does. And so the cycle continues...

2016-07-06T13:12:46+00:00

anon

Guest


I have no idea how Massa has managed to keep a drive in F1 for so long. The British Grand Prix of 2008 sums up Massa's talent. The fact Bottas hasn't been able to destroy Massa shows more about Bottas than it does Massa. Clearly Bottas isn't an elite driver based on that alone. And look, Massa at Ferrari was my favourite driver on the grid. But Ferrari were about two seasons too late in getting rid of him, and all he brings to an F1 team is Brazilian money. And given Brazil's economic troubles, I doubt there's much Brazilian money finding its way into F1 nowadays. McLaren still persisting with Button is bad enough. To replace Button with Massa of all drivers would show just how incompetent McLaren management is.

AUTHOR

2016-07-06T12:37:02+00:00

Rodney Gordon

Expert


What do you really think though? You're right that Stoffel is the primary candidate for McLaren, be surprised if Massa doesn't go knocking on Ron's door still.

2016-07-06T08:23:19+00:00

Naveen Razik

Roar Pro


My personal hope is he switches to IndyCar alongside Scott Dixon and Tony Kanaan at Chip Ganassi. He might even drive the Ford GT through them as well!

2016-07-06T05:16:01+00:00

Connor Bennett

Editor


You're right Simoc. At 35-years old he's not a development talent anymore and he's had his chance, unfortunately for him that can only mean bad news for the future. At least we won't all get confused between Massa and Nasr anymore

2016-07-06T03:26:47+00:00

Simoc

Guest


There is zero chance of Massa being at McLaren. Over and over they state that their reserve driver Vandoorne is required. Vandoorne seems to be the most sought after talent without an F1 drive, and all bets are that he will take Buttons place. Massa belongs on the scrapheap now. If he was going to win a WDC he would have done so. He hasn't progressed Williams. He is a goner.

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