Lewis Hamilton |
This season has been excitingly unpredictable, with seven different
winning packages in nine races. Added to which is surprising competitiveness
from teams that were backmarkers last year. A really mixed bag of results at
the front, and the usual and really tight battles in the midfield.
My package ratings after the British GP are set out in the
table below. Bear in mind that the figure of 100.0 is the ultimate, fastest
rating, and that the stats in the table are the average for the nine races so
far.
PACKAGE RATINGS
AFTER BRITISH GRAND PRIX: Race 2012/9
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PRE-RACE
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RACE
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Pos.
|
Package
|
Rating
|
Pos.
|
Package
|
Rating
|
1
|
Hamilton/McLaren-Merc
|
100.0
|
1
|
Hamilton/McLaren-Me
|
100.0
|
2
|
Rosberg N/Mercedes
|
100.36
|
2
|
Grosjean/Lotus-Renlt
|
100.1
|
3
|
Schumacher M/Mercedes
|
100.42
|
|
Raikkonen/Lotus-Ren
|
|
|
Vettel/Red Bull-Renault
|
|
3
|
Alonso/Ferrari
|
100.2
|
4
|
Webber/Red Bull-Renlt
|
100.43
|
|
Vettel/Red Bull-Renlt
|
|
5
|
Grosjean/Lotus-Renault
|
100.5
|
4
|
Maldonado/Williams-R
|
100.3
|
6
|
Raikkonen/Lotus-Renault
|
100.6
|
|
Perez/Sauber-Ferrari
|
|
|
Button/McLaren-Merc
|
|
5
|
Webber/Red Bull-Ren
|
100.4
|
7
|
Alonso/Ferrari
|
100.8
|
|
Schumacher M/Merced
|
|
8
|
Maldonado/Williams-Rn
|
101.0
|
6
|
Rosberg N/Mercedes
|
100.5
|
9
|
Kobayashi/Sauber-Ferr
|
101.1
|
7
|
Massa/Ferrari
|
100.7
|
10
|
|
101.3
|
|
Kobayashi/Sauber-Ferr
|
|
|
Perez/Sauber-Ferrari
|
|
8
|
Button/McLaren-Mer
|
100.9
|
|
Di Resta/Force Ind-Merc
|
|
|
Hulkenberg/Fce
|
|
|
Hulkenberg/Frce
|
|
9
|
Di Resta/Fce
Ind-Mer
|
101.0
|
11
|
Ricciardo/Toro-Rosso-F
|
101.4
|
|
Senna B/Williams-Ren
|
|
|
Senna B
|
|
10
|
Ricciardo/Toro Rsso-F
|
101.2
|
12
|
Vergne/Toro-Rosso-Ferr
|
102.3
|
|
Vergne/Toro Rosso-F
|
|
13
|
Kovalainen/Caterhm-Cos
|
103.2
|
11
|
Petrov/Caterham-Cosw
|
102.1
|
14
|
Petrov/Caterham-Cosw
|
103.6
|
12
|
Kovalainen/Cathm-Cos
|
102.4*
|
15
|
Glock/Marussia-Cosw
|
105.2
|
13
|
Glock/Marussia-Cosw
|
103.3
|
16
|
Pic/Marussia-Cosw
|
105.5
|
14
|
Pic/Marussia-Cosw
|
103.5
|
17
|
De la Rosa/HRT-Cosw
|
105.9
|
15
|
De la
Rosa/HRT-Cosw
|
104.5
|
18
|
Karthikeyan/HRT-Cosw
|
106.7
|
|
Karthikeyan/HRT-Cos
|
|
* explanation
below
Because perceptions are formed so much by race results,
particularly successful ones, it is perhaps surprising that the Hamilton-McLaren-Mercedes
heads both tables. However he was twice relegated five grid places from his
front row qualifying positions, which probably cost him two wins. His
hypothetical total then of three wins would gel with his top ratings here.
My ratings are completed only at each season’s end, and are
weighted almost totally towards race performances rather than pre-race times. I
use the term ‘pre-race’ in place of ‘qualifying’, because best times are quite
often set in earlier timed sessions.
For my calculations, only the first eight events have been
used for pre-race stats, the British GP times being non-representative due to
the rainy weather. For the race ratings, only five events have been used, four
of the races having had safety car deployments which always skews times and
results. Prime example was the Vettel/Red Bull-Renault walking the European GP
at Valencia by 20 seconds at over half distance, when the safety car came out;
five laps later on the ‘re-start’ he had only a 0.1 second lead!
It is principally for these reasons that I prefer time
differentials for rating competitors, rather than race results, placings wins,
points or championship standings. My season average ratings havealmost always
reflected the most competitive, the winners, at the top.
The outstanding pre-race ratings of the Mercedes pair
Rosberg and Schumacher just behind the Hamilton/McLaren-Mercedes, are put in
perspective on race day: they are ‘overtaken’ in the race time ratings by seven
other packages! Obviously a problem with race-pace for Ross Brawn and his team
for the third successive year, although 2012 is their best. Rosberg at last
scored a win, in China .
Unexpected is the rise of the ex-Renault-now-Lotus-Renault
team. Their race ratings are just behind the Hamilton package! The de-retired Raikkonen
seems to have been fast from day one, and his young, re-employed teammate
Grosjean is matching the experienced Finnish WDC for speed.
No surprise is the persistent speed and racecraft shown by
Alonso in his off-pace Ferrari. Only pre-race rated at 100.8, he completed the
races within 0.2 of the top-rated Hamilton
package. His starts have been electrifying. James Allen and Murray Walker both
reckon Fernando to be the best driver of all. The red car has improved from
being over 0.8% off race pace in China to its current 0.4% on
average.
Two new drivers who have performed so competitively at or
near the front are Pastor Maldonado/Williams-Renault and Sergio Perez/
Sauber-Ferrari. Pastor impressively held off Alonso to win the Spanish GP, the
first ‘ top-step’ for Williams since Montoya in 2004! The Williams car turnaround
from its 2011 rating of 101.7 has been exceptional. As has Sauber’s, from their
last year’s 101.2 car rating, driver neutral.
Now for those who unexpectedly underperformed.
The Red-Bulls are no longer tops; and nor has Vettel been
notably faster than teammate Webber. As in 2010 Mark has been within one or two
thousandths of a second per lap in both pre-race and race ratings. The ratings
of the two Mercedes
and the Red Bulls in pre-race times have been shown to two
decimals, between 100.36 and 100.43, so close are they to date this year.
Ferrari driver Massa
has again not managed to race rate within 0.5% of Alonso. The big surprise has
been Jenson Button: 0.6 off in pre-race ratings, he has dropped to 0.9 off his
top-rated teammate in the races. JB says it is definitely not tyres. Can he be
suffering an off-season as did Webber in 2011? Or from being too long in the
game, as Jody Scheckter and Hakkinen were in 1980 and 2001, when they dropped
off rapidly after great success?
One who is probably misrepresented on the race rating table
here is Heikki Kovalainen, ranked 0.3 behind teammate Vitaly Petrov. In the
five safety-car- free races, Heikki suffered collision damage pitstops in China and Bahrain ,
was on average 0.2 faster than Vitaly in Spain
and Canada ,
but finished at a slow 102.9 at Silverstone, for which I have yet to discover
if there is a reason. This drops him down in relation to Petrov. As the season
progresses his ratings should climb again. As mentioned in my ratings
explanation, events when the cars suffer problems are not counted.
The rest of the packages rate much where one would expect,
based on car performances.
A fascinating season, and exciting for the great fighting
spirit exemplified by Alonso, Hamilton, Vettel, Webber, Maldonado, Perez, Grosjean,
Raikkonen and Kobayashi, and the talent and professionalism of the whole field.
The 2007 and 2008 seasons were close-fought, but 2012 is as close among more
packages at the front.
© Patrick O’Brien. Nothing from this page can be
used without the permission of Patrick E. O’Brien.
***
Think my comment ended up elsewhere, but brilliant info as ever Patrick - and can say it here without being lynched: Maldo's driven his heart out this year, almost no wonder he's made a couple of massive gaffs/brain freeze moments, but he really is driving like a man possessed ;-0)
ReplyDeleteThanks Bill. Your race commentaries are always very accurate and of course, well written. Agree on Maldonado: whatever his 'contacts' on track, his speed is exceptional within the field, and so much faster than his teammmate's.
ReplyDeleteAs you say, it is a relief to be able to post out of sight of the nooses.