hollus wrote: ↑03 Jan 2025, 08:41
Because it doesn’t quite come across as if you really would like to see it.
So why?
Yes I would love to see a woman in F1. I almost always root for the underdog. I was so happy when Hamilton entered the sport - the first [half] black person I believe, not to mention having come from relatively lowly means. And later on I kept on hoping that Rosberg would beat Hamilton since he had no titles. And I really hope that Stroll never beats his team-mate. I consider Stroll the overdog having had the tables in his favour all the way through, it seems.
Temperamental: I don't consider this a barrier since it is internal, not externally imposed. It is a fact that even with all the same accesses in the world women and men choose different occupations. Why are only 10% of engineers women and only 10% of nurses male? There has been plenty of access for both sexes in both of these fields for decades.
Some people will be in denial of the temperamental effect.
The peer group effect: This one I think is solvable. When a young girl decides to do karting I imagine that she is faced with entering basically a boy's world. One wonders what would happen if there were separate girl's karting series'. This would encourage more girls to enter but I personally believe that this will still be hampered by the Temperamental effect. It's just a fact that fewer girls are interested in competitive racing. A smaller pool of competitors will, simply by statistics, yield fewer megastars.'
People who are in denial of the temperamental effect will blame everything on the Peer group effect.
On physicality: Over the years I have considered the idea that it may be too physically demanding and unfortunately I think it is. For only two reasons as far as I can tell: braking and cornering. Then I went through the process of thinking that, well, F2 is harder for women in the steering aspect - I think Jamie Chadwick, particularly, complained of this - so that made me think that maybe it would be possible to alter the sport to make it easier for women. Making power steering mandatory in the lower formulae, for instance. Allowing power brakes - these are against the rules in F1 though I can't discern why this is from searching online. But then there's the corner speeds, and I don't think there is any way around this one. There must be a reason why they don't put in headrests like they do sometimes on Indycars on ovals so they can rest their head - probably something to do with using your 'internal gyro' to tell what the car is doing underneath you. To fix cornering speed would require slowing the cars down but to do so would be to remove them being 'gladiators'. Years ago there was a comment, from Montoya I think, when asked about some new regulations to slow the cars down. He commented ~"well why don't we just drive around in F3000 cars and CALL it F1". Slowing the cars down wouldn't be very....F1.
hollus wrote: ↑03 Jan 2025, 08:41
I guess you don’t quite get to box people into your arbitrary (1) and (2) points unless you answer the equally arbitrary question asked to you...
Obviously my propositions are far from arbitrary. I crafted them in considering that it is a pretty sensible idea that Elite Athletes are segregated by sex. And that F1 requires Elite Athletes (as it presently is).
F1 drivers don't have massive necks and legs and spend many hours a week lifting weights just for fun. In other words, strength matters.
https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautifu ... all_women/
Edit: to be clear I don't believe it impossible for a woman to compete in F1, I just think it vanishingly improbable.