mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jan 2025, 18:44
Why would it take a special woman? This all all anecdotal with no actual metric or measure even in opinion that demonstrates where the bar rests for endurance and strength and why woman can't reach it.
There has been plenty of evidence brought up suggesting why men have a significant advantage in an F1 car. And what metric or measures have you come up with? The link you provided earlier is evidence for the OP. F1 drivers are "elite athletes" where "strength" matters.
https://www.redbull.com/us-en/formula-o ... ness-plans
You just seem to be stuck on the idea that racing in F1 doesn't require strength. And you are wrong.
And in order to prove your point you need to address the OP. But you can't and so you won't.
mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jan 2025, 18:44
I could read your reply and totally forget that women compete in elite sports already.
Irrelevant unless they are successfully competing with men. See the OP.
mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jan 2025, 18:44
If I watch any elite racket sport it becomes really clear that women have plenty of strength and endurance at the top level. At tennis grand slams they will play for an average of 1 hour and 40 minutes up to 8 times over the course of two weeks at an intensity that seems at face value at least the equal of what an F1 car would take.
An ant has plenty of strength and endurance. They can lift ten times their own weight! An ant would easily be able to compete in F1 and wipe the floor with everybody.
It has been estimated that the top woman tennis player might be about rank 300-400 in the men's, and that's being generous. There have been 770 odd Grand prix drivers in history. IF tennis is at all comparative to F1 (doubtful), then we would expect about 2.5 women to have been able to compete in F1 in the entire history of F1.
mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jan 2025, 18:44
I've no doubt that Men are stronger than women. The question is, does that extra strength really count or are they strong enough? Surely once you have enough strength and endurance, any extra isn't really going to add anything? There's a limit to what you need. And I don't think it is the limiter in terms of how an F1 driver can perform.
Google says there are 8,000 different sports in the world. If you are correct then surely there are at least a few other examples of sports where the competitors are described as elite athletes where women can compete with men. For myself I am honestly open to there being examples, but I suspect there will not be.
mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jan 2025, 18:44
Womens marathon record is 2hrs 9 mins and the mens is 2 hours on the dot. Nothing much in it. Mens 100m record is 9.58 and womens is 10.49. The Women's time is only 9% greater. I think that once you get to the elite level where body architectures are quite different from the average that you are summarising, the difference is not always as big as you think.
7% (marathon) and 9% is quite a lot. Again for the purposes of this discussion what is relevant is what rank the fastest woman would be on the men's ranking.
For the marathon it might not be as bad because it is an endurance sport. (It will still be bad because if you are a man and are 7% slower than the fastest man then you are not getting anywhere near the Olympics or world championship; the top runners will all be within a few % of each other on the world stage)
But when it comes to muscle strength - a lot more important in sprinting - many male team sports players, for instance, can run 10.5 which means that a 10.49second female sprinter will be waaaaaay down the list of professional male sprinters.
mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jan 2025, 18:44
This all all anecdotal with no actual metric or measure even in opinion that demonstrates where the bar rests for endurance and strength and why woman can't reach it.
And so, even in just this post I have come up with plenty of evidence that is far from anecdotal to suggest that women would not likely be able to compete in F1. I look forward to your evidence.