Dunlay wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:52
balex wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 16:35
Well that was a great illustration of how Verstappen dominating is definitely not the only reason the races are boring.
It is far too easy for every driver to reach their maximum individual performance in their respective cars - so that when they find it, they can just stay there.
It does not matter how few tenths of a second the field is separated by: If the lap-by-lap
variance is minuscule, the racing is predictably metronomic.
Changing the regulations to allow them to run closer together and bunch the field up even more will achieve precisely nothing:
Future regulation changes have to focus on making it harder for any driver to achieve peak performance in their car lap-after-lap, so that inevitably lap-time variance is increased.
Nothing changes. It has never changed ever since F1 has existed. F1 has witnessed very few years when there was a competition for championships between two or more teams/drivers. You just cannot stop human brain from finding performance advantages in F1. There will always be that combination of team, car and driver that gets ahead of the field.
Yes I understand & agree. I'm not looking to counter that, you could even say I'm arguing for
not trying to manage that performance delta:
Instead the regulations should focus on how to increase individual performance variance. That will increase the overlap in performance windows of different cars and drivers, regardless of the absolute peak performance of that car/driver.
Whether there are multiple "classes" in the race due to one team absolutely nailing the regulations is orthogonal to how entertaining the racing is within those classes. I wish we could ditch the focus on getting the cars racing nose-to-tail - there's no correlation between that and how entertaining the racing will be.