Moxie wrote:I pay $100/month for my Direct TV subscription, and the only TV I really watch is racing. I read news on-line and I watch shows on Netflix. I found that I can watch the Tudor United Sports Car Series on-line, so the only thing I am really getting for $1200/year is F1. Yes, my problem is with one team dominating, and indeed this has become the norm.
Edit: I will admit that the battle between Hamilton and Rosberg was entertaining, but I remind you that the constructors championship is the money paying contest of F1. I want to see the battles of Ferrari vs McLaren vs Williams.
in 1985 Prost won the championship after winning only 5 of 16 races - McLaren won the constructors championship with 6 victories
in 1986 Prost won the championship after winning only 4 of 16 races - Williams won the constructors championship with 9 victories
in 1987 Piquet won the championship after winning only 3 of 16 races - Williams won the constructors championship with 9 victories
2013 Vettel won the chamionship after winning 13 of 19 races and Red Bull won the constructors championship with 13 victories.
2102 Vettel won the championship after winning 5 of 20 races and Red Bull won the constructors championship with 7 victories
2022 Vettel won the championship after winning 11 of 19 races and Red Bull won the constructors championship with 12 victories
Well, personally, I'm glad to see races with tight fights all the way from front to back and I like my team to do well. Meaning that watching Red Bull dominate can be frustrating, but at least some decent back and forth can compensate. With Mercedes dominating and a good fight, of course I have found my ideal constellation, but I'm aware that this is very subjective.
Anyway, I did a bit of research today for something else as I wanted to see how individual seasons were dominated and I collected the percentage of race wins by the dominant team that over the past 40 years. As you can see, the current state of affairs has been pretty much the norm all the way back to the early 1980s or for roughly 30 years - and when you go further back, you'll see more of the same, look at how Alfa Romeo, Ferrari and Mercedes dominated in the 1950s or Lotus in the 1960s, so it was really the 1970s and early 1980s that were the anomaly:
[Year] [races won]/[total # of races] [percentage] [by team] (comments)
2013 13/19 68% Red Bull
2012 7/20 35% Red Bull / McLaren
2011 12/19 63% Red Bull
2010 9/19 47% Red Bull
2009 8/17 47% Brawn
2008 8/18 44% Ferrari (Hamilton Champion on McLaren)
2007 9/17 53% Ferrari
2006 9/18 50% Ferrari (Renault and Alonso Champion with 8/18 44%)
2005 10/19 53% McLaren (Renault and Alonso Champion with 8/19 42%)
2004 15/18 83% Ferrari
2003 8/16 50% Ferrari
2002 15/17 88% Ferrari
2001 9/17 53% Ferrari
2000 10/17 59% Ferrari
1999 7/16 44% McLaren (Ferrari Constructors Champion with 6/16 38%)
1998 9/16 56% McLaren
1997 8/17 47% Williams
1996 12/16 75% Williams
1995 11/17 65% Benetton
1994 8/16 50% Benetton (Williams Constructors Champion with 7/16 44%)
1993 10/16 63% Williams
1992 10/16 63% Williams
1991 8/16 50% McLaren
1990 6/16 38% McLaren / Ferrari
1989 10/16 63% McLaren
1988 15/16 94% McLaren
1987 9/16 56% Williams
1986 9/16 56% Williams (Prost Champion on McLaren)
1985 6/16 38% McLaren
1984 12/16 75% McLaren
1983 4/15 27% Ferrari / Renault / Brabham (Piquet Champion on Brabham)
1982 4/16 25% McLaren (Rosberg Champion on Williams / Ferrari Constructors Champion with 3/16 19%)
1981 3/15 20% Williams / Brabham / Renault (Piquet Champion on Brabham)
1980 6/14 43% Williams
1979 6/15 40% Ferrari
1978 8/16 50% Lotus
1977 5/17 29% Lotus (Lauda and Ferrari Champion with 4/17 24%)
1976 6/16 38% Ferrari / McLaren (Hunt Champion on McLaren)
1975 6/14 43% Ferrari
1974 4/15 27% McLaren