Cannonballer wrote: ↑04 Mar 2019, 20:33
The odds of Mercedes or any team winning six championships in a row are exceedingly slim.
All teams being equal, each team has a 1 in 10 chance of winning a WCC. This would be the roulette wheel analogy. But they aren't all equal, so some teams have greater chances. There has been a top two or three teams over the previous five seasons. Merc, Ferrari, and RB, with at least one season where RB wasn't a strong 3rd. In these past five seasons, Merc and Ferrari usually had something like a 1 in 2 chance of winning the WCC. Would be interesting to calculate a backmarker team's odds--I think they would be very small: hundredths or thousandths.
Six sequential championships, all teams being equal, would be... (1/10)^6 or .000001%. One in a million. Exceeding indeed, but for superior teams like Merc or Ferrari who have had something more like a 50% chance of winning a WCC in previous years, they are looking at perhaps (1/2)^6 or .016% odds (around 1 in 62).
I don't think most have known Merc's true pace in previous seasons either, so it could well be that during some years they had a 100% chance of winning the WCC, or near to.
This post is just my intuition on the matter; I'm hoping someone more versed in mathematics, statistics, and probability might chime in. One might say I'm relying on hindsight here, to which I'd agree. However, hindsight doesn't change what were the properties of each team within previous seasons. Results are often the only data we have to work with. If a sophisticated audit of each team were published before and during each season, I think we'd find similar results, with Merc and Ferrari type teams being given 1 in 2 odds.
To that point, it makes me wonder if the greatest threat to a team with good odds of winning is: hubris. If one, or a group, assumes themselves destined for victory, they may not try as hard nor be as cunning; but, that same feature is often described as advantageous within competitions, when it is known as: confidence. Or fearlessness.