Nuvolari wrote:I think the problem with your point is, that the field is competitive this year. You only have to look at where Hamilton finished with the damaged car. If this was 2014/2015, you can bet your bottom dollar that he would've been knocking on a podium finish, for sure. It's just that in this race, the other main competitors that could have raced with Rosberg for the win, promptly took themselves out of contention at the first corner. Hopefully, the next race provides a clean first corner so we can actually see a race among the front running teams.
We have different definitions of competitive then. Competitive to me, is the opposite of having Mercedes tagged for wins prior to every race. You'd be a fool to bet against them. Which one of those two drivers is anyone's guess, but betting on anyone else is a gamble and unlikely to happen, except for circumstance.
The qualifying gap is substantial. And during the race, Ferrari hasn't shown to be that competitive
if not for circumstance (so far).
Yes, they might all be closer and as in races of 2015 and 2014, if you start from dead last and damage your car, even the quickest car will unlikely propel you to the podium. Nothing new there. My post is strictly speaking about the likely outcome when everything goes according to plan. Right until now, this has been the case for Nico, not for Hamilton.
My point, if it goes
according to plan for both Mercedes drivers (meaning 1 and 2 after the first few corners in dry conditions, no unpredictable safety-cars etc), you will see a Mercedes 1&2 for the most part of this season. Under this assumption, Hamilton would need 6 straight wins to be
level by the half-way-mark. I'm not assuming he will pull that off, so being as optimistic as I can, if he wins 66% of the next 9 races, he'll be level. That's already in the 2nd half.
A lot can happen, sure. I'm just putting into perspective what a 36 point lead means if you are facing a competitor in the same car and there's a 50+% (I'd say above 60 actually) certainty that either one of you will be on 1st or 2nd place each race.
In 2015, the team secured 12 1-2 finishes out of 20 races. Two further races, one of them won while the other had issues. Those two should/could have been a 1-2 too, bringing that figure up to 14 out of 20. I think this year is slightly more competitive, but I'm still expecting over 10 1-2 finishes at least, hence my above 50% figure.