Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 2013?

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Anon123
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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I still think Hamilton will outscore Rosberg this season, Nico is driving very well and Lewis is arguably not at his best and he could have won today had he not been squeezed in the first corner.

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raymondu999
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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beelsebob wrote:
raymondu999 wrote:What are your threshold figures for fairly clear, clear, slim etc?
For now, I'd been doing it rather based on intuition. You're right, I should come up with some decent system for dealing with it. I'll have a think, and see if I can formalise it well.
Ahem :mrgreen:
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beelsebob
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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raymondu999 wrote:
beelsebob wrote:
raymondu999 wrote:What are your threshold figures for fairly clear, clear, slim etc?
For now, I'd been doing it rather based on intuition. You're right, I should come up with some decent system for dealing with it. I'll have a think, and see if I can formalise it well.
Ahem :mrgreen:
Right, I still haven't managed to figure out any good formalisation. The problem is how to integrate the 3 different metrics in a sane way. I'm open to ideas.

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raymondu999
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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I'm no stats expert - but why not use geometric mean? Multiply the three metrics to get a number - then take the cube root. Then divide into the number of zones you have?
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beelsebob
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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raymondu999 wrote:I'm no stats expert - but why not use geometric mean? Multiply the three metrics to get a number - then take the cube root. Then divide into the number of zones you have?
That's not a bad idea but... we're dealing with ratios, and many of them involve division by zero if you try to make a sane numerical value from them. I can't use the number of races above the average won, as that will introduce negatives for many drivers, and defeat the geometric mean. I can't use the number of races in which they came in ahead, as this will make the result non-symetric.

Ral
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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Apart from the numbers on paper, the Mercedes team battle is about even now I would think? Two races in a row now Hamilton has not only been beaten, but has also looked completely lost about what to do to make up the deficit. And one could argue the only reason Hamilton came out on top in the race in Bahrain, was because he had the "luxury" of not having someone behind him pushing him to go faster than he could do with his car on those tyres.

Certainly "fairly clear top dog" in favour of Hamilton seems a bit off at this point.

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SectorOne
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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He´s on average the quicker driver and have higher grid position compared to Nico.
Don´t let Poles cloud your judgement.
And let´s not forget he´s also ahead in the standings. He´s ahead everywhere except amount of poles and wins.

Imagine strapping in Nico in last year´s Mclaren and put him against Hamilton.
It would be the same outcome as what Hamilton is experiencing right now.
It takes time to get accustomed to not only the car but the "physics" meaning going from super strong front end, looser rear end to rock solid rear and not as strong front end.

Nico is undoubtedly a super quick driver but let´s give it some time and see what happens.
My guess is that Nico needs to push because it won´t last for too long.
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Ral
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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I'm not looking at the number of poles. But, actually like Sutil and Di Resta at Force India which I forgot to mention, the points are skewed by DNFs not of their own doing.

I can see holding Grosjean's points loss in Monaco against him because that was his fault. But Rosberg's car just broke down in Australia and China through no fault of his own. Sutil was taken out by Gutierrez in China (while ahead of Di Resta). The points situations would have been different without these things happening.

Now, you can't count points they didn't get, but "clear top dog" would indicate a level of domination that just isn't there between these two driver pairings. In fact, as I said, Rosberg has been dominating Hamilton for two race weekends now and would have beaten him on track in Malaysia were it not for team orders, but more than that, he was pretty much on even footing anyway in the races where Hamilton did beat him.

So I guess what I'm saying is: if you are going to use "unscientific" units to compare performances, you might as well consider the actual performances. Or perhaps use slightly less judgemental terms (for lack of better words - sorry, I'm not native English speaker and can't quite think of other words to describe what I want to say I think judgemental is a bit strong). Ie. you could say "Hamilton is beating Rosberg by a fair margin" or "Alonso beats Massa comprehensively". But even that really only takes the championship positions and points into account and if that's all you're looking at for the "judgement" of how the teammates are performing relative to one another, then why mention the other two factors at all?

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Blackout
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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I don't give a damn about Ham vs Ros duel but
SectorOne wrote: And let´s not forget he´s also ahead in the standings. He´s ahead everywhere except amount of poles and wins.
-_-'
Rosberg retired two times because of the car and there were team orders in Sepang AFAIR

Grosjean too had to retire in Barcelona and had a perfectible car in the first three races.

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SectorOne
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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Blackout wrote:I don't give a damn about Ham vs Ros duel but
SectorOne wrote: And let´s not forget he´s also ahead in the standings. He´s ahead everywhere except amount of poles and wins.
-_-'
Rosberg retired two times because of the car and there were team orders in Sepang AFAIR

Grosjean too had to retire in Barcelona and had a perfectible car in the first three races.
I´m just stating what the facts say. If we remove the bad luck from Rosberg his points would have been much closer yes no doubt about that.

But Grosjean.... the dude is a liability on track. He simply should not have a superlicense.
It´s been way to many races now since he first came into F1 and he´s proof speed is only half the story in F1.

For me a guy like Maldonado was like the most extreme one should be but he calmed down, won a race when opportunity struck and has been running under the radar now for a very long time.
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Stradivarius
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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I am wondering, do those who now rate Hamilton in front of Rosberg because he has more points, also rate Button in front of Hamilton from 2010 to 2012? Keep in mind that Button scored more points than Hamilton while they both drove for McLaren.

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SectorOne
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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Stradivarius wrote:I am wondering, do those who now rate Hamilton in front of Rosberg because he has more points, also rate Button in front of Hamilton from 2010 to 2012? Keep in mind that Button scored more points than Hamilton while they both drove for McLaren.
Now you are isolating the situation though.

The fact that Hamilton has more points then Rosberg is just one part of the puzzle.
Other parts are that despite ROS has taken three poles, Hamilton is the quicker guy on average with higher average grid position.

I don´t think anyone is saying "Hamilton has more points then ROS, that means he´s better".
"If the only thing keeping a person decent is the expectation of divine reward, then brother that person is a piece of sh*t"

Speng
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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beelsebob wrote:
raymondu999 wrote:I'm no stats expert - but why not use geometric mean? Multiply the three metrics to get a number - then take the cube root. Then divide into the number of zones you have?
That's not a bad idea but... we're dealing with ratios, and many of them involve division by zero if you try to make a sane numerical value from them. I can't use the number of races above the average won, as that will introduce negatives for many drivers, and defeat the geometric mean. I can't use the number of races in which they came in ahead, as this will make the result non-symetric.
Rather than using points (yeah they are what counts so I can see the point) but the fact that you get nothing skews the numbers somewhat. 10 vs 11 is infinitely better while 11 vs 20 is nothing. I think you should use finish position. This is mainly a problem for mid pack teams that are sometimes in and out of the points.

Re Button, I think Lewis leaving McLaren has been bad for him because my perception (I could be wrong) is that Jenson used to pinch setups from Lewis a lot more than vice-versa. Also he and Lewis got on fairly well while same is definitely not true with Perez. The two of them end up running close in races a lot and Perez is looking to pass Button at every opportunity while Jenson whinges. I think Perez may be on the up due to aggressiveness with what is basically a --- car.

Hamilton vs Rosberg is probably the most interesting of the top (-ish) teams as I think they're closer than we think especially in the last couple races with their good qualifying. The team seems to have the general strategy of qualifying well and conserving during the race which I think suits Rosberg better than Lewis who is a natural charger. I think this was particularly the case in Spain where Lewis should've gotten one more stop. Right now I'm guessing Rosberg is on the up as he's qualifying well and the team's basic strategy suits him.

Massa was looking good although it remains to be seen how the crash in Monaco will affect his health/confidence. That was a big crash despite the pooh poohing by the team and others.

Disappointed in Grosjean this year I think he got an overly bad rap last year as too many of his crashes were attributed to him rather than bad-luck/others. He started this year looking more mature but recently has gone back to where people *say* he was last year. What's excusable in a virtual rookie isn't in a second year guy in a top team.

Despite what Webber might think he is the number 2 at RBR and he drives like it. Plus I think the team does all the strategy experiments with him. Not to mention he's been getting in too many fender benders that cause him to come off his race strategy.

Stradivarius
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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SectorOne wrote:
Stradivarius wrote:I am wondering, do those who now rate Hamilton in front of Rosberg because he has more points, also rate Button in front of Hamilton from 2010 to 2012? Keep in mind that Button scored more points than Hamilton while they both drove for McLaren.
Now you are isolating the situation though.

The fact that Hamilton has more points then Rosberg is just one part of the puzzle.
Other parts are that despite ROS has taken three poles, Hamilton is the quicker guy on average with higher average grid position.

I don´t think anyone is saying "Hamilton has more points then ROS, that means he´s better".
Actually, Rosberg has a higher average grid position than Hamilton. Rosberg has started 6th, 6th, 4th, 1st, 1st, 1st. Hamilton has started 3rd, 4th, 1st, 9th, 2nd, 2nd. Rosberg's average is 3.167, while Hamilton's average is 3.5.

But we are not simply looking at the results, are we? You seem to imply that we are trying to look a bit behind the results, since points is just one part of the puzzle. But eventually, results need to be converted into some sort of comparable parameter, such as points, in order to perform a comparison. So maybe we could do that?

In Australia I think it is fair to assume that Rosberg would have finished on the place behind Hamilton, as that is where he was at the time he retired, running on similar pace to Hamilton. So that would have gotten Rosberg 8 more points.

In Malaysia there was a team order that most probably made Rosberg loose 3 points, while Hamilton gained 3 points.

In China, it is not so simple. Rosberg was behind Hulkenberg when his troubles started and Hulkenberg ended up 10th. On the other hand, Rosberg was in front of Grosjean, di Resta and Ricciardo, and they all beat Hulkenberg at the end. So Rosberg might have taken 6 points or 0 points and it is not possible to tell what was more likely. Let's put him in between and say that he lost 2 points, i,e. that he would have finished 9th.

Then we have Bahrain, where Hamilton was 4th quickest in qualifying, but started 9th due to a gearbox change. Here it is also quite difficult to say what he could have done, but considering Mercedes' tyre struggle, I don't know if Hamilton could have done much better. On one hand, di Resta and Grosjean are normally drivers that Hamilton could beat. On the other hand, if Hamilton had started 4th, he would be more likely to run into the same problems as Rosberg, fighting for positions through the race and eating his tyres, forcing a 4th stop. So he could have gained 2 or 5 points, if he had started 4th or he could actually have lost points and ended up like Rosberg. It's not really possible to tell, so let's give Hamilton 2 points more as compensation for the grid penalty and see where it leads us.

Hamilton then ends up with 1 point less (looses 3 points in Malaysia and gains 2 in Bahrain). While Rosberg ends up with 13 points more. So then it is 61 points to Hamilton and 60 points to Rosberg when trying to look behind the results. And to me it becomes very clear that they are too close to make any call. Even if you argue that Rosberg wouldn't have scored any points in China even if his car had been working, and that Hamilton would have taken 3rd in Bahrain if he had started 4th, you will see that the total difference is too small to say anything else than that they are at the same level.

In my opinion, the difference between Rosberg and Hamilton is too small to draw any conclusion. One single race is enough to change the average both in points, qualifying and race, and to me that simply means it is too close to make a call yet. It is possible that Hamilton has just had a difficult period and that he will go back to consistantly beat Rosberg in most qualifyings and races. But it is also possible that what happened in the beginning of the season was an abnormality and that Rosberg will continue to be quicker than Hamilton overall. Or maybe Hamilton still hasn't adapted to his new team? The truth is I don't know, and neither do you. I am guessing that they will keep performing at a very similar level and then it makes no sense to rate one driver higher than the other after just a few races. It's like predicting the weather by measuring the temperature. We need more data.

Claiming that Hamilton is the quicker guy seems very odd to me when Rosberg has been fastest in half the races and half the qualifying sessions. Another quality that defines a driver other than speed, is his judgement. Hamilton may be quick, but I think he is lacking in good judgement. He gave up 2nd place in Monaco and I would put that on the account for lack of judgement. There was no reason not to follow Rosberg. A couple of seconds margin would have been ok, but the tyres are changed in less than 3 seconds, so there was no reason to back off as much as Hamilton did and the result was that Vettel and Webber got past him. He then was about to destroy his tyres trying to pass Webber, when his team had to remind him that he would need those tyres for the rest of the race. At McLaren there was no doubt Hamilton was quicker than Button. But his bad judgement resulted in him scoring fewer points than Button. Even in 2011 when Button beat Hamilton by quite a margin, Hamilton still was quicker overall. But Button was more clever.

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WhiteBlue
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Re: Your thoughts on who will win the teammate rivalries 201

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Great post Stradivarius!!!!
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