Hakkinen won two world titles on the bounce. If that's not performing, I'd hate to see what is.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑03 Apr 2020, 03:24The f1 eras dont overlap well with the decades. Senna for instance he is one the fence between the 80's and the 90's.
Schumacher only covered the first half of 2000's. The second was definitely Alonso. Hakkinen wasn't really a performer at all. Maybe is best to group them by some sort of era or generations.
Alonso won one race in the first half, one in the second half of the 2000s so he's not a performer either (according to the definition applied to Hakkinen).
The second half of the 2000s was much more typical of F1 titles where drivers alternated. Back-to-back or more wasn't that usual during the 60s, 70s and most of the 80s. In the 50s it was, but only because you had Fangio and Ascari who both won back-to-back (or better). Brabham, too, of course in 59/60.
Looking at the way the titles are distributed over time, we might say that the runs of multiple titles coincide with times of professionalism. The early days were dominated by manufacturers such as Alfa, Ferrari, Mercedes etc. None of those horrible garagistas back then. Then they took over and titles were spread around. Then we saw a return to high levels of professionalism in the likes of McLaren under Ron Dennis. Attention to details and manufacturers coming back with decent engines (Honda in the McLaren and Renault in the Williams. Ferrari's early 2000s dominance was down to the professionalism and guidance of Brawn etc. That and bespoke tyres and test-as-much-as-you-like.