Senna had a very similar long streak on winning every rain race over a 4 or 5 year period as well. It was also insane and only ended because of a car failure while leading handily in the rain in canada.
Senna had a very similar long streak on winning every rain race over a 4 or 5 year period as well. It was also insane and only ended because of a car failure while leading handily in the rain in canada.
So what stopped his teammate from accumulating a similarly impressive record?Sieper wrote: ↑25 Jul 2019, 19:17Yes he is a great driver, as is (amongst many other feats) proven by his record against any opponent he went against in the same car. But merc has had a big power advantage since 2014 which they always used for driving with more downforce. That’s a big advantage to have in the rain.
That would be the Canada win where Button chopped across Hamilton as he tried to overtake him on the start straight? Button was lucky he ended Hamilton's race and not his own.Wynters wrote: ↑25 Jul 2019, 23:01His 2007-2013 stats are pretty good as well, to be fair. Button's Canada win was pretty sublime though.Pyrone89 wrote: ↑25 Jul 2019, 22:58To be fair he has had the very best car in the wet since 2014 and only to contend Rosberg and Bottas with, who are, lets say politely, not big on wet driving. If he had a Button next to him this stat would be very different. But as discussed before, this holds true for a lot of his stats if you deduct the Merc from it (2007-2013 stats).
Nothimg apart from them being less talented than those drivers. But the point is there are a number of drivers more talented than Bottas and Rosberg in the wet and those drivers could have had the same record if in Hamilton’s position, making it not some godlike achievement it is made out to be here.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑25 Jul 2019, 23:41So what stopped his teammate from accumulating a similarly impressive record?Sieper wrote: ↑25 Jul 2019, 19:17Yes he is a great driver, as is (amongst many other feats) proven by his record against any opponent he went against in the same car. But merc has had a big power advantage since 2014 which they always used for driving with more downforce. That’s a big advantage to have in the rain.
Look it up, I may be one or two off but he was on low 20’s wins before joing the most dominant team in the history of F1 (and perhaps sport in a wider context). Dont mistake it, Hamilton is an absolute top level driver, but without the Merc (so in end of 00’s competitiveness style grids) he would now be closing in on Senna’s number of wins and titles (a career cut short), not Schumachers. Still very impressive.
Coultard has 13 wins across 14 seasons. Lewis has 22 across 7. Coultard only had 3 or more wins in 1 season, Lewis has 3 or more in 5 seasons.
So it was 9 instead of 8.
That is a farce that keeps gettimg repeated.Jolle wrote: ↑26 Jul 2019, 00:01Rain should normally is the great leveler, where power doesn’t matter and it’s more about the driver. He won the last 9 wet races, over 5 years. Dominated some, was lucky at others but impressive non the less and a clear sign that he’s got exceptional racing craft.
Some of the races, three come in mind (Monaco, Silverstone and Germany) he made up a bad qualifying.
You realise you are proving my point right? That the story/context behind the stats are important to properly assess how worthy those stats are. That is why I intentionally chose Coulthard, not Jackie Stewart or co.
He had more wins than Andretti (1 title), G Hill (2 titles), Brabham (3 titles), Button (1 title), Hakkinen (2 titles) and Raikonnen (1 title) before he joined Mercedes. So what?Pyrone89 wrote: ↑25 Jul 2019, 23:56Look it up, I may be one or two off but he was on low 20’s wins before joing the most dominant team in the history of F1 (and perhaps sport in a wider context)
Schumacher's figures are a product of the amazing Ferrari stable of the early 2000s, coupled with bespoke tyres from Bridgestone and unlimited testing at their own facility. Oh, and contractual No.2 drivers who were noting more than sparring partners for him.
Yes and no. Yes the car is the most important road to succes and your only true competitor is your teammate and no because there is a reason someone like Coulthard went to a redbull in progress and Hamilton to Mercedes.