Chuckjr wrote: ↑12 Mar 2019, 18:09
Biggest lie from last two seasons to try and add some sort of legitimacy to the 2017 and 2018 championships -- which it didn't. Merc have had the fastest most reliable system from 2014. Maybe this year they won't, but we don't know that yet.
Ferrari may have had the fastest car (MAYBE) the first few races of 2018, but their upgrades failed by a few races in, and they were CLEARLY second fastests the rest of the year. Just like all through 2017.
You must be kidding. Perhaps I would suggest to differentiate between fastest package and team/driver performance. I'll give you that 2017 perhaps worked in Mercedes favor because they had a definite edge in qualifying (Q3 to be precise) and that naturally carries over to an advantage for the race, but at the same time they struggled massively with finding the right set-up for the race in regards to optimizing the tire performance. And then of course, reliability and that driver error in the Asia races cost them dearly in regards to the championship.
2018, no chance in hell. They had the edge in qualifying in numerous cases in which they not only qualified ahead with one car, but both cars. Yes, they massively paid with the update at Singapore, but you can not excuse some of the team-mistakes they made in light of the advantage they had. They beat Mercedes on numerous instances throughout the year not because they were lucky but because they had defacto the best package. Just look at Spa and Monza. Mercedes/Hamilton really maximized their points though which nets them an extremely impressive rating for team-performance but car-performance wise, Ferrari had the reliability and they had the edge throughout 2018, sans a few races (Barcelona, France, Abu Dhabi etc).