Oh, for the love of Pete. Fangio, 1957.
Three hat tricks in the first three races, a mechanical failure retirement in Britain and then, the most dominant race in history, German GP, 1957, the race that actually made F1 famous.
Enough to say that he was 50 seconds behind the Ferraris after an horrible pit stop.
Then he proceeded to break the track record in one of the last laps,
a mere 11 seconds faster than Collin and Hawthorne Ferraris.
That's not dominance, that's Definitive Destruction, Horrible Humiliation, Perfect Performance, Divine Driving and and Blatant Bossiness, dear Peter Parker. At Nefarious Nürburgring, nothing less.
As for statistics, mehhh... there you go, with the records that still stay, after what? Sixty years?:
Winning percentage: 46% (24 wins in 52 races)
sennafan24 wrote:Drivers seem to lose one lap pace once they get older...
Yeah, you wish. I think I haven't lost pace in the circuits I've raced for 35 years, sennafan...
It's only after 20 laps that my ribs start to hurt...
So, over one lap you have this stats for El Chueco:
Pole percentage: 56% (29 poles in 52 races)
Front row starts: 92% (48 front row starts in 52 races)
Show me a 92% number in
anything worthy and I concede I'm wrong.
How many drivers deserve a statue?
From the horse's mouth:
"Fangio is on a level much higher than I see myself. What he did stands alone and what we have achieved is also unique. I have such respect for what he achieved. You can't take a personality like Fangio and compare him with what has happened today. There is not even the slightest comparison."
-- Michael Schumacher -- (on winning more championships than El Maestro).
Yeah, I know. Actually, this guy won the first GP I went to... and he has several statues