sennafan24 wrote:Stradivarius wrote: It's not as simple as saying "pole position to Hamilton, and race victory to Vettel, so it's 1 - 1 and they are equal."
To be fair, I think both have performed to a high level with what they have been given this year.
To be clear, I was not really comparing Hamilton and Vettel, as they obviously have different machinery. I was merely trying to show that qualifying performance is only significant to the extent that it allows you to perform well in the race. During the last years, Red Bull has been great at qualifying, but their race pace has also been strong enough to win races and titles. Nevertheless, Red Bull's qualifying performance has been the key to many of their victories.
Mercedes has several times this year been great at qualifying, but then it turned out to be worth nothing because they could not deliver the performance in the race. In Spain, Rosberg/Mercedes took pole and finished 6th. Alonso/Ferrari qualified 5th and went on to win the race. Overall, there is no doubt that Alonso/Ferrari was best. But when weighing qualifying and race against each other, it is 1 - 1 between Rosberg/Mercedes and Alonso/Ferrari, which I think makes no sense.
Maybe my argument can be better expressed in the following way: The qualifying result is determined by qualifying performance only. The race result is determined by the qualifying performance and race performance combined. Therefore it makes no sense to me to add qualifying once more into the equation. Qualifying is already accounted for when looking at the race result alone.
Adding qualifying and race together here, is like adding the score after the first half to the score after full time of a football game. So if Liverpool plays Manchester United and leads 2 - 0 after the first half, and then looses the game 2 - 3 after 3 goals to United in the second half, this way of calculating the score would count Liverpool's first half goals twice. 2 - 3 after full time plus 2 - 0 after half time equals 4 - 3 in total. And Liverpool is considered better than Manchester United despite loosing the game. The logic is exactly the same here: The first half time score is deteremined by the first half performance only, while the full time score is determined by the first half performance and the second half performance combined. So the full time score covers everything and it makes no sense to add half time score into the equation.