Sieper wrote: ↑07 Oct 2023, 09:24
Xyz22 wrote: ↑07 Oct 2023, 01:59
Sieper wrote: ↑07 Oct 2023, 00:35
The Merc isn’t a poor car here, it is the clear second best car of the season overall as well and at this track, with the difficult conditions it is easier to not do good and then certainly Checo is at risk. That is already the 8th time this season and all, or almost all had the tougher conditions when Checo failed to make Q3.
I actually think Lewis will get that P2, on merit. He hasn’t left much on the table.
.566” isn’t even that out of the ordinary against Max;
Max had -0.433s on Ricciardo in 2018.
-0.739s in 2019 against Gasly and Albon
-0.565 against Albon in 2020.
The gaps between the field now are closer making a deficit having bigger consequences.
The 2018 calculation is probably wrong. I have never seen such a number for Max and Ricciardo. In terms of percentage it was under 0.2% and in seconds i'm 99% sure it was under 0.25s from all the sources (if we are talking about qualifying. Also, these calculations don't include all the issues Danny Ric had that year with an insane amount of compromised FPs sessions that put him on the back foot for the entire weekend. Would have he been faster than Max? Absolutely not, but they were a factor, for sure).
Anyway, Perez performance is beyond embarrassing at this point.
Here is the data source;
https://www.racefans.net/2018-f1-season ... ying-data/
Max also had an insane amount of technical problems in 2018.
This calculation is completely different from all the numbers i have seen throught the years. The numbers are never the same because there are different ways to calculate the average gap (using seconds is already a huge mistake in my opinion), the lap times and sessions considered.
For example these are the results calculated by Sky Sports:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Mercedes
Final score: Lewis Hamilton 15-6 Valtteri Bottas
Average gap: -0.171s for Hamilton
2. Ferrari
Final score: Sebastian Vettel 17-4 Kimi Raikkonen
Average gap: -0.256 for Vettel
3. Red Bull
Final score: Max Verstappen 15-5 Daniel Ricciardo
Average gap: -0.145 for Verstappen
4. Renault
Final score: Nico Hulkenberg 13-8 Carlos Sainz
Average gap: -0.101 for Hulkenberg
5.Haas
Final score: Romain Grosjean 11-8 Kevin Magnussen
Average gap: -0.253 for Grosjean
6. Force India
Final score: Esteban Ocon 16-5 Sergio Perez
Average gap: -0.115 for Ocon
7. McLaren
Final score: Fernando Alonso 21-0 Stoffel Vandoorne
Average gap: -0.392 for Alonso
8. Sauber
Final score: Charles Leclerc 17-4 Marcus Ericsson
Average gap: -0.510 for Leclerc
9. Toro Rosso
Final score: Pierre Gasly 13-6 Brendon Hartley
Average gap: -0.118 for Gasly
10. Williams
Final score: Sergey Sirotkin 12-8 Lance Stroll
Average gap: -0.066 for Sirotkin
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are ton of comparison made available on Reddit like this
https://www.reddit.com/r/formula1/comme ... ualifying/
or this
We had an amazing site with comparisons built in
https://f1teammatestats.herokuapp.com/f1analysis.php but unfortunately doesn't work any more.
Maybe if i have time i'll dig up the numbers myself because that 0.433s doesn't sound right.
Edit i forgot i saved a lot of comparison from
https://f1teammatestats.herokuapp.com/f1analysis.php in images.
Here it is Max vs Ricciardo in 2018
This is still a big gap but nowhere near what we saw with Gasly, Albon and Perez.
I also have Max vs Gasly in 2019: