Wass85 wrote: ↑01 Apr 2020, 12:17
He is the blueprint for being in the wrong car at the wrong time, a shame we didn't see him fighting for the title towards the end of his career.
This is an interesting point. In order to have a chance of winning you do need a competitive car and a team that is able to help you. That doesn't necessarily mean team orders, although they obviously help a lot in some cases, but a team that is able to react, to win the strategy battles etc.
Look at the Mercedes team in the hybrid era to date, the RedBull team of 2010-2014, Ferrari 2000-2004 as recent examples.
Put Alonso, or Vettel or Hamilton or Schumacher in any of those and you're looking at multiple title wins. Likewise, if you could have put Senna or Prost or Stewart or Clark or Moss or Fangio in those same situations you'd see the same thing.
What makes the best in to the best is the ability to take the opportunity and make it work for them, and to perform at a high level for a long period in order to benefit fully from the opportunity.
There's no doubt that Hamilton has benefited from an excellent series of cars produced by the class team of the moment, but he has had to drive at a very high level, consistently, for several years to take advantage. Likewise Schumacher in 2000-2004. And also, when things aren't going according to plan, being able to maximise any possible value to be had from the race. Ask Rosberg how difficult it is to do that against a team mate who is equally as focused, quick, etc. Look at Bottas 2.0 - couldn't keep it going for whatever reason. Maybe Bottas 3.0 will be better, we'll have to wait and see.
I think Schumacher was helped by team mates that weren't as quick as him and were compliant to team orders, although Rubens did occasionally do a better job. But that's the thing - it was on occasions, not all the time.
I think for any driver to be considered for the top slots, you have to look at who they had in the other side of the garage. Beating guys who are obviously not up to standard is no great result. It's expected (and that does create its own pressure, of course). But if the team mate is as fast, or at least in the same quarter of a second, then that's more telling if you can beat him consistently. I think that's one area that marks out Hamilton - he has had some quality team mates over the years. Sure, Kovalainen wasn't a top drawer guy (more a Rubens than a Michael) and Bottas is quick but variable, but Alonso, Button and Rosberg were all top drawer drivers. All won titles so their ability can't be argued. Even "lucking in" to a title still requires you to have been at the front enough to make points. Especially if you're racing one of the best as Rosberg had to.
These discussions are interesting but they are kind of theological. And I mean that in the sense that you can discuss and argue all you like but there will never be a definitive answer. There will never be proof. The end result will always be based on belief of some form. Belief that one aspect is more important than another, that one driver is "just better" than another. Even the attempts at so-called scientific comparisons suffer from the system chosen to compare them. The discussions are fun but pointless. So let's all keep it fun. We have so far.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.