ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑17 Jun 2017, 17:36
henry wrote: ↑16 Jun 2017, 16:44
Perhaps the champion should be the driver who completes the races in the least total time. This the method to decide the winner in the Tour de France cycle race.
Essentially who can complete 19 races in the least time.
This should encourage drivers to drive as fast as they can and to pass people who are preventing that. It would probably need the ability to discard some races , perhaps best 12 from 20. No more get pole, cruise and collect.
Great so then if you have a mechanical DNF in Monza its much worse than if you have one at Singapora.
The driver with the most wins should always be champion, plain and simple, F1 should be about 1 thing only and that is WINNING races.
Good point. The DNF issue would need some thinking about. It might be sensible to normalise the race times to some arbitrary time, say 90 minutes. So finishing first at Monza or Singapore is worth 90 minutes. So if Singapore is 2 hours long and you finish 20 seconds behind you get 90 minutes 15 seconds as your time.
Since there can only be one winner of a race it makes the efforts of other participants meaningless.
Vettel might as well have parked up after 3 laps in Canada. Whereas in a points based competition he had much to gain by driving hard and Hamilton would have been a fool to go any faster.
Even better, if the championship result is dependant on time difference,
both Vettel and Hamilton would have been incentivised to drive as hard as they could for the whole race.
A winner takes all system places a premium on one lap pace, winning pole, starting well and then defending the lead, which is pretty easy with today's cars. On the other hand a time based method would favour drivers who drive quickly for the whole race, 70 laps rather than one and a bit.
Fortune favours the prepared; she has no favourites and takes no sides.
Truth is confirmed by inspection and delay; falsehood by haste and uncertainty : Tacitus