Cute reply, although perhaps I misunderstand your point - you present a metric of dominance (team points) and show that according to that metric the W05 is the most dominant car.Diesel wrote:Just wanted to correct this fallacy which is repeated a few times. In fact, the W05 over the season isn't that far ahead of the RB7 in terms of dominance.elf341 wrote: The W05 is indeed the most dominant car we have seen in a long time.
Code: Select all
RB7 W05
Race 1-2 3 11
Quali 1-2 6 12
Code: Select all
RB7 W05
Not Beaten On Pace 4 15
Be sure to see that shift when the competition have closed the gap. Remember when we did the math halfway the season. If Hamilton would have retired and Ricciardo would've won a race, he would've matched Hamilton's points in the season. Considering how dominant the Mercedes at that point was, that advantage wasn't really a lot. I think if the competition will close the gap, Mercedes will hand Hamilton the no.1 status when their both drivers match each other's performance. When you give both your drivers an equal treatment, you won't win the championship unless you have a significant dominance. Other than that, if they continue giving their drivers equal treatment, that would be a sign of error in management at Mercedes.Shrieker wrote:If Hamilton had enjoyed #1 privileges like Vettel, Alonso or Schumacher did, he'd more than likely have won 15-16 races this year. Real fans of the sport should be thankful that Mercedes didn't offer any privileges to their drivers and allowed them to race. Schumacher's (2002, 2004) and Vettel's (2011, 2013) seasons were really dark times in terms of title battles. I always watched and know very well what the feeling is like. Their team mates were either unable to or not allowed to challenge them. And I can't remember a single time where they went head to head with their team mates like Nico and Lewis did in Bahrain. It's ironic in a way that what is usually one of the most boring circuits in a season provided a duel that will be remembered for years/decades to come as was the case with Dijon '79.
Okay, now you are just making up statistics to suit your argument. The RB7 won 12 races in 2011, how on earth was it "not beaten on pace" in only 4 races when it finished 1st in 12!?elf341 wrote:Cute reply, although perhaps I misunderstand your point - you present a metric of dominance (team points) and show that according to that metric the W05 is the most dominant car.Diesel wrote:Just wanted to correct this fallacy which is repeated a few times. In fact, the W05 over the season isn't that far ahead of the RB7 in terms of dominance.elf341 wrote: The W05 is indeed the most dominant car we have seen in a long time.
Some other metrics that might be interesting to assess the dominance of cars are front-row lock-outs and race 1-2s.Another one I considered was the number of races where a different car finished in front on pure pace (this is correlated to 1-2s, but takes into account DNFs). To keep the theme of higher number is better, a "Not Beaten On Pace" metric:Code: Select all
RB7 W05 Race 1-2 3 11 Quali 1-2 6 12
The MP4-4 is the only car that truly challenges the W05.Code: Select all
RB7 W05 Not Beaten On Pace 4 15
Sorry, maybe I wasn't clear. By 'not beaten on pace', I mean that no other team's car was able to beat it in the race.Diesel wrote: Okay, now you are just making up statistics to suit your argument. The RB7 won 12 races in 2011, how on earth was it "not beaten on pace" in only 4 races when it finished 1st in 12!?
It´s a useless way to look at dominance, as proven by the fact that 8 different drivers this year took the fastest lap.Diesel wrote:If you want to try to measure the dominance based on pace, look at fastest laps. Still not perfect, because the lead car is likely to coast to the finish towards the end of the race, when the cars tend to be quicker.
What a load of tripe. It's not the car's fault one of the drivers wasn't able to extract the full potential.elf341 wrote:Sorry, maybe I wasn't clear. By 'not beaten on pace', I mean that no other team's car was able to beat it in the race.Diesel wrote: Okay, now you are just making up statistics to suit your argument. The RB7 won 12 races in 2011, how on earth was it "not beaten on pace" in only 4 races when it finished 1st in 12!?
Out of the RB7's 12 wins:
- 7 of those races had an MP4-26 finishing in front of an RB7
- the F150 finished in front of an RB7 4 times (although only 1 time when the MP4-26 did not also finish in front an RB7).
- For only 4 races were no other cars able to beat the RB7 in the race (aka my 'not beaten on pace' statistic of 4)