Pyrone89 wrote: ↑14 Jul 2020, 14:14
The 2008 McLaren was together with the Ferrari the best car. As can be seen from the WDC result. BMW was up there until BMW decided to stop investing else Kubica would have been WDC and Hamilton’s career may have been very different (possibly not getting the Mercedes seat as a non-WDC, we will never know).
That's ridiculously circular logic. Just because a driver won the WDC in a car doesn't mean that's the fastest car. That's why the WCC takes into account the points scored by both drivers.
To extend that logic, every race winner only wins because they have the fastest car. Skill, strategy, etc is irrelevant. Or, to keep it in the WDC-sphere, Verstappen was the leading non-Mercedes driver last year. Seems a poor showing to only manage to win 3 races out of 21 bearing in mind he was in the second fastest car?
To put the 2008 McLaren on the same level as the Ferrari is not supported by any significant data. 8 poles each suggests they might have shared the same one-lap pace (although, refueling era so YMMV) but Ferrari won 1/3 more races and had 13 fastest laps to 3.
The evidence of the performances of the cars as a whole show that the Ferrai out performed the McLaren by a larger margin than the McLaren outperformed the Sauber.
Pyrone89 wrote: ↑14 Jul 2020, 14:14
And in current F1 driver politics it is not ‘best drivers gets best cars’ how many times people keep repeating that.
Look at Verstappen, Alonso and Ricciardo, Russell etc.
Verstappen is driving for a team that has never finished outside the top 3 of the WCC since he joined it. Alonso spent plenty of time amongst the top teams. Ricciardo...is he a top driver? Ferrari obviously don't think so, nor do Red Bull. Russell has had one season in F1.
Is the rule 100% true at all times? No. But, if you are a top driver, will you get a seat at the grown up table at some point in your career? Yes. Absolutely.