RedNEO wrote:This actually makes no sense. You are essentially saying you want to make things easier to show the skill of a driver when it should be the other way round. The clutches are not a lottery so can people stop saying that as Alonso has got great starts after great starts. Real skill!
Just to clarify my post;
Yes and no. Right now, the starts are an essential part of winning and not winning. In other words; the first 500m of a 300km race. That is 0.167% of the race. I don't mind the race starts being a matter of skill - not at all - but at the same time, I don't want the start to determine by a 99% chance the outcome of the race. We've had far too many starts influencing the race in a negative way this year, more so than last year, and the year before.
If we go back to the V8s - we had variations of starts as well, but even a bad start there didn't ruin the race to the degree it does now. Some did, many didn't. In those days, I didn't mind the variation we got and I didn't mind the variation in 2014 and 2015 either. For instance in 2014, a bad starting Mercedes still meant we got to see a race between the two because a relatively "bad start" only accounted for a single or two, maybe 3 positions lost. Even if a bad starts might account for a drop to right the back of the grid can be great for the race (just as a crash, a dnf can spice up the championship or an outcome of a singular race), but only if it's happens on an off chance and not on a regular basis.
Respect goes to Nico and his team for being the more constant performers this year. And he probably won't care how he wins the title (if he pulls it off), but I would have rather seen him win it in a straight fight (which it should have been) and not handed to him on a platter as many races this year have gone, when he simply took the lead and disappeared on the horizon while Hamilton got shunted off by Bottas in Bahrain, had to start from last because he ran out of engines in Belgium, had a botched start in Monza from pole, a race he should have dominated and in Japan, where we had a great race the two previous years, but were robbed because again a start dictated the outcome of the race. Then there is China where he was out in Q1 because of problems with his power unit (started last), same again in Russia but luckily the error only hit in Q3 but starting 10th, he was never in contention for the race win.