marvin78 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2018, 14:35
Maybe I am. But you're right. I forgot to write that this is just my opinion. I see it like that and yes, in my opinion Mercedes was the dominating team in some of that races. But that is not based on facts. See? That's the way you do it if you want to discuss things. I can do that here but I would not do that in serious threads. Oh wait...
I think it's fair to say that everything that is posted here is an opinion of sort. But I must say, I am intrigued by your opinion - Without wanting to go into the dictionaries definition of
dominance, I really can't see any of that apart from maybe Silverstone, Monza and perhaps CotA. But the rest? Heck, I even forgot to mention Monaco (which is also after Barcelona), which brings up the count to at least 8 races (from a total of 15) where Mercedes wasn't the dominating team or clearly was slower than Ferrari or in some than even RedBull. Now, I take it if one just looks at the results from last year, one could
think Mercedes had an easy going, but that clearly wasn't the case of at least a couple of races (Monaco, Spa, Hungary, Malaysia, Singapore and Mexico). Ferrari should have easily won Singapore and Malaysia having the quickest car there, except rain and brain fade propelled Hamilton to an extremely lucky win from 5th (on a track where overtaking is next to impossible) and Malaysia where both Ferraris imploded outside the race and Mexico with Vettel and Max going at and pretty much stepped over each other. Or maybe you were just looking at qualifying throughout the year when, yes, Mercedes did have some magical few tenths over Ferrari. But going into next year, that will probably be smaller, given that oil burning will be closer monitored and the limit decreased again to 0.6l.
If I were to sum up 2017, it would be the following:
- Mercedes dominant in qualifying
- Mercedes very quick in cold and harder compounds, but somewhat a bit of a struggle first half of the season when not
- Ferrari having an extremely quick car on all tracks
- Ferrari imploding in Singapore and Malaysia and threw away a lot of points (they could have easily got 60 and 86 points - 2x25 + 2x18 potentially with both Kimi and Vettel qualifying ahead of both Mercedes) that turned the WDC upsidedown
- RedBull with an extremely quick car towards the end of the year, but also with PU (Renault) issues
- Bottas faster than Kimi (stronger 2nd driver)
Overall, I think Ferrari could have (should have) run the WD championship extremely close. In the end, I think Mercedes had a bit more potential to win the WDC over Ferrari, especially if they had sacrificed Bottas for Hamilton, but I still think that Ferrari was an extremely formidable contender and overall the easier car to manage with fewer faults. No doubt, the qualifying advantage helped Mercedes throughout the year.
Will they still retain that advantage in 2018? Will they have solved the tire issues? Will they still have a power unit advantage in the races with the oil being limited to 0.6l and the FIA regulating now what exactly is allowed to be in the oil?