Nuvolari wrote:I love how you explain away the races in which Ferrari were competitive as being anomalies, while equally cherry pick "circumstances" to explain the uncompetitiveness of Mercedes in races where they fell short.
Are you really going to argue that a team that won 3 races opposed to the
other team winning 17 is not an anomaly?
anomaly
əˈnɒm(ə)li/
noun
noun: anomaly; plural noun: anomalies
1.
something that deviates from what is standard, normal, or expected.
"there are a number of anomalies in the present system"
I certainly see a pattern there. Sadly, I also see a lot of reasons why that
dominant team of 2014 and 2015 did not win in those 3 races of each season. 2014, we've had technical issues/glitches and collisions that saw RedBull win 3 of those races. In 2015, as I pointed out, Ferrari won a very messy race (Hungary), one where the Mercedes simply did not work (Singapore) and another, that was highly discussed on this very forum if Mercedes had shot themselves in the foot on strategy alone (Malaysia). I was actually among the ones that thought Ferrari had done a very good job and that the high temperatures neutralized the performance gap that was very present over the course of the entire season. I'll actually give you that in 2015 at least, the 2nd team to win races actually did so on merit and not through pure luck as IMO RedBull lucked in, in 2014. They [RedBull in 2014] were fortunate to win those because Mercedes had failures on both cars on 2 of those 3 instances (Canada, Spa) and Hungary was very unfortunate with the safety car.
I'll tell you what; your mentioning of Kimi's car failure in Australia and the Vettels DNF - it had zero outcome on the winner of those races. We might not know what Vettel could have pulled out of the bag had he not had the failure in Bahrain, but given on each of those races we have either partial data or at the very least the performance of one of the two cars to gauge and it's clearly evident that Ferrari did not have the pace nor the position to compete for the win. In Australia, Vettel was the quicker and leading Ferrari driver and both Rosberg and Hamilton ended up ahead. In Bahrain, Kimi never stood a chance. In China, neither did, perhaps due to circumstance, but had that not altered the race, we might have seen a closer race, but there is still no evidence there that Ferrari had the quicker pace had they been on the leading Mercedes tale. None. At no point. That's the reality and it's painting a rather clear picture to me so far.
Nuvolari wrote:I would say 2015 was predictable, in hindsight.
At what point did you start watching? Because reviewing the data, it is very evident that the season started pretty much the way it ended; 1-2, 2-3, 1-2, 1-3, 1-2, 1-3, 1-2, 1-2, 1-2....... (note the anomaly in position 2...). It certainly didn't take me till the end of the season to see the pattern.
BTW; That pattern is/was a progression of the 2014 season. And what we are seeing now, is also a progression of 2015. If we had new rules this year, new unknown venues etc, a lot of unknowns, I'd be more hesitant to point out the blatant obvious, but as it is - considering that this season is very much an evolution to the previous 2, it's quite logical why this season is shaping up to be very similar to the previous season, as was the one before it.
There was reason to be optimistic however, that somehow, other teams might have closed that gap entirely (due to reaching the point of diminishing returns of the current rule set), but it seems there was still some potential left for Mercedes to make more optimizations to their car and engine which has made it more difficult for other teams to catch them.
Again, I think the field has become more competitive [than 2015 & 2014], but we're a far cry away from a closer field like i.e. 2010 or 2012 and that advantage Mercedes still has is considerable, as supported by their pace in qualifying so far and the data we have seen in the races. Once they start getting both drivers beyond the first corners without any headaches, it will be a lot more difficult for the teams behind to capitalize.
IMO, it will take a lot to change that. Rule changes (tire changes?) or Mercedes imploding over perhaps their drivers taking eachother out in a desperate fight to the WDC. Or a lot of rainy, unpredictable races and technical glitches.
@Mods; This discussion is probably not suited to this race-topic. Perhaps this should be moved to a general WDC/WCC 2016 topic?