Since 1950, 26 of the 63 Formula One seasons the
championship-winning drivers had cars that were not the fastest.
This I found from my Rating System, which separates the
driver from the car and rates them as individual performance elements that make
up the combination. Exposing and reading the car-ratings without drivers
changes quite a few commonly-held perceptions. Briefly, my System scores the
fastest at 100.0, slower speeds being scored in increments of one decimal (0.1)
upwards, that is, from 100.1, 100.2 and so on. As a rough guide: in 2012 the
slowest cars, the HRTs rated at 103.1; that is 3.1% off-pace. This can be
translated as 3.1 seconds per lap slower, or multiplied by 60 to equal 186
seconds, just over 3-minutes in a 60-lap race. A competitor rated at 100.1
would be only 0.1-second per lap slower than the top-rated one, or x 60 =
6-seconds in a 60-lap race.
Who were the drivers who scored championships in off-pace
cars? Some of the drivers experienced more reliability than faster rivals; some
enjoyed better-organised teams. Others benefitted from rival team drivers
taking points from each other, as happened with McLaren in 2007 (Alonso and
Hamilton), Williams in 1986 (Mansell and Piquet) and Lotus in 1973 (Peterson
and Fittipaldi). Many of these 26 championships must have been won by
exceptional drivers and outstanding performances, to have overcome their
car-speed deficiencies.
For the first eight years 1950 to 1957, all the driver
champions had the fastest cars. So Farina, Fangio and Ascari all enjoyed the
fastest cars.
Hawthorn |
1958: this was
that close-won, headline-grabbing, championship battle between two British
drivers, Hawthorn and Moss, which went down to the wire with Hawthorn winning
by a single point. Hawthorn’s car, the Ferrari 246 Dino which rated at 100.7 by
my System, was a lot slower than Moss’s Vanwall’s which scored a car-rating of
100.2. Championship-winner Hawthorn’s Ferrari’s slowness was ‘overcome’ by the
ridiculous points system then in force, in which drivers had to discard some
races! The points allocation then was abstractly skewed. Hawthorn only won one
race, Moss four times. Hawthorn did however drive extremely well, was very
consistent and determined, and rated at his best driver-rating of 100.4 in
1958.
1962: It was in
1962 that the next drivers championship was won in an off-pace car, Graham
Hill’s BRM P57/62. Commonly-held perceptions are that Clark ’s
innovative, monocoque Lotus-Climax 25 was the fastest car. I too believed this,
until my Rating System showed otherwise. The BRM was generally considered to
have been the next-fastest car. However the unheralded, traditional,
tubular-framed Cooper-Climax T60 was actually the fastest car of 1962. By my
System it rated at the ultimate100.0, while Hill’s BRM car-rated at 100.1 and Clark ’s Lotus-Climax at 100.2. What disguised the
Cooper-Climax’s true pace was that its drivers (Bruce McLaren and Tony Maggs),
the ‘other half’ of the performance equation, were much slower than the Lotus
and BRM drivers. The Cooper-Climax consequently only won once, at Monaco , and
then only took the lead in the last few laps after Hill’s dominant BRM had
retired.
Surtees - 1964 Champion |
1964: this mixed
season of high retirements among the front-running Lotus-Climax, Brabham-Climax
and Ferrari cars, saw John Surtees win the championship in his Ferrari 158.
This V8-engined Ferrari car-rated at a modest 100.6. Rivals Lotus-Climax and
BRM both car-rated at 100.1, the Brabham-Climax at 100.2. Brilliant driver
though he was, Surtees was fortunate in the unreliability of the Lotus and
Brabham cars, the arbitrariness of the championship points system and the fact
that Hill was a slower driver, for the BRM was the most reliable of the four top
cars of 1964.
1969: this was
the first of Stewart’s three Drivers Championships, and all were won in
off-pace cars! Stewart’s Matra-Cosworth MS80 car-rated at 100.3 against the
fastest car of the year, the Brabham-Cosworth BT26 at 100.0. With Ickx driving
the Brabham-Cosworth, it was as fast as the Stewart/Matra-Cosworth combination,
but the BT26 was not quite as reliable nor as consistent. The Tyrrell-run Matra
team was too organised and Stewart was a superior, faster and more experienced
driver, winning six races to Ickx’s two.
1971: Again
Stewart won the drivers title in a car that was not the fastest; his
Tyrrell-Cosworth 001-3 rated at 100.5 while the speed-superior BRM P160 was
fastest at 100.0. The beautiful Tony Southgate-designed BRM was
0.5-second-per-lap faster than the Tyrrell (assuming for simplicity, a lap time
of 100 seconds as at today’s Abu Dhabi ).
It was again a case of Stewart and his Tyrell team being too well-organised and
competent. This was in contrast to the BRM team, whose owner Lord Stanley employed
eight drivers to gain the most advertising exposure! This was at the expense of
his overworked team, designer and the mostly unsettled drivers. Stewart scored
six wins, the faster BRMs just two.
1972: this season
was a close call between the championship-winning Fittipladi Lotus-Cosworth 72D
car-rated at 100.1 and its faster rival car, the McLaren-Cosworth M19A rated at
100.0. The 0.1 difference in car speeds translates into just 0.1-second per lap
of 100-seconds, or 6.0 seconds in a 60-lap race of 1hour 40 minutes. Fittipaldi
was fortunate in that the McLaren’s full-time drivers Hulme and Revson were
much slower than he was, enabling Fittipaldi’s Lotus-Cosworth to score five
wins to the McLaren’s one. The Tyrrell-Cosworth 005-6 of Stewart that was
Fittipaldi’s strongest rival, car-rated at 100.3 but won four races; Stewart
did miss one race due to suffering an ulcer, which also helped Fittipaldi.
1973: this season
really showed Stewart’s exceptional driver talent: his Tyrrell-Cosworth 005-6
car-rated at 100.6, and was slower than four other cars! The fastest was the
late-appearing Brabham-Cosworth BT44 at 100.0, the Lotus-Cosworth 72D at 100.3,
the Surtees-Cosworth TS14 at 100.4 and the older Brabham-Cosowrth BT42 at
100.5. The new BT44 Brabham-Cosworth can be discounted, only appearing in the
last two races of the season; main rivals were the Peterson and Fittipaldi
Lotus-Cosowrth 72Ds, these two drivers scored four and three wins respectively,
thereby sharing/spreading their driver points. Stewart won five races and the
title.
1974:
Championship-winner Fittipaldi was asked, “Did you have the fastest car?” He
said, “It’s difficult to say, but for sure we have the best team.’ By my System
his McLaren-Cosworth M23B car-rated at 100.3. Three cars were faster, the
Ferrari 312B3 and the Tyrrell-Cosworth 007 equal-rated at 100.0, and the
March-Cosworth 741 at 100.1. Fittipaldi won three races, as did the Reutemann/Brabham-Cosworth
BT44, car-rated at just 100.5, Peterson’s Lotus-Cosworth 72E at 100.8. The two
Ferrari won three races, while the Scheckter Tyrrell-Cosworth won twice.
1975: most
considered the beautiful, powerful, Ferrari 312T the fastest car as Lauda
dominated the season with Regazzoni to win six times. Yet the 312T car-rated at
only 100.4, being slower than the McLaren-Cosworth M23C at 100.0 and the new,
privately owned and funded, Hesketh-Cosworth 308 which car-rated at 100.1. Lauda
driver-rated at about half-a-second per lap faster than McLaren driver
Fittipaldi and Hesketh driver Hunt, which more than made up the difference in
the Ferrari car’s speed deficiency. The Ferrari team was also exceptionally
well-run.
1977: Lauda won
this year’s drivers championship for Ferrari in the sixth-fastest car and
following his late-1976 Nurburgring crash and serious burn injuries! His
Ferrari 312T2 car rated at 100.3, but six cars were faster: the Wolf-Cosworth
WR1 at 100.0, the Lotus-Cosworth 78, Shadow-Cosworth DN8 and Surtees-Cosworth
TS19 all at 100.1, and the McLaren-Cosworth M26 at 100.2. Lauda won only three
times compared to the Andretti’s Lotus’s four, but Lauda scored six second
places to the Andretti’s one.
Andretti’s 1978 Lotus-Cosworth 79 |
1978: this season
was not clear-cut: championship-winner Andretti enjoyed the fastest car, the
beautiful, ‘ground-effects’ Lotus-Cosworth 79, for all except one race, the
Swedish GP. Here he was easily overtaken by Lauda’s ‘fancar’ Brabham-Alfa Romeo
BT46B which cruised to win by 34 seconds! After protests from the other teams,
Brabham owner Benie Ecclestone withdrew this huge-downforce, ‘fan-suction’ car
which never raced again. Andretti dominated the season with six wins, his
Lotus-Cosworth 79 rated at 100.1 against the Brabham-Alfa Romeo fancar’s
obvious top-rating of 100.0. The potential figure was probably even faster, for
the Brabham drivers Lauda and Watson‘sandbagged’ pre-race and during the race,
to disguise their cars’superiority.
For the rest of the 1978 season the Lotus’s closest rival
cars were the ‘normal’ Brabham-Alfa Romeo 46C at 100.2 with two wins, and
remarkably, the Reutemann Ferrari 312T2 and 312T3, both equal, car-rated at
100.9, but scoring four wins! Championships, wins and ratings often do not
coincide, racing having so many facets.
1979: if ever a
team’s professionalism and cohesiveness proved superior, it was this season.
Ferrari 312T4 driver Jody Scheckter won the title with three wins and a car
rated at 100.5. This was slower than four other cars. The Williams-Cosworth
FW07 and the Brabham-Cosworth BT49 were fastest at 100.0, the Ligier-Cosworth
JS11 and Tyrrell-Cosworth 009 at 100.4. Jones and Regazzoni won five races for
Williams, Scheckter and Gilles Villeneuve six for Ferrari. The Williams team
were as yet not as competent all round and the cars not as reliable as the
Ferraris.
1981: Piquet is a
driver who does not receive his due recognition for sheer talent and speed.
Piquet won the 1981 championship in a Brabham-Cosworth BT49 that was rated at
100.9. The fastest car was Prost’s Renault RE30 at 100.0 which also scored
three wins, but retired too often (nine times to Piquet’s four) to benefit from
its speed superiority. Two other cars were faster than Piquet’s Brabham, the
Ligier-Matra JS17 car rated at 100.1 with two wins, and the Williams-Cosworth
FW07 at 100.5 which scored four wins, two each to Reutemann and Jones.
Rosberg - 1982 Champion |
1982: this
closely-contested championship was won by Keke Rosberg with a single win and in
a car that was slower than four others. Rosberg’s 3.0-litre, Williams-Cosworth
FW08 car-rated at 100.5. The fastest car was the 1.5-litre, turbocharged, Renault
RE30B rated at 100.0; the Ferrari 126C2 was at 100.2, and so was the earlier
Williams-Cosworth FW07D used only in the season’s opening two races. The
Brabham-BMW BT50 and the carbon-fibre chassised, McLaren-Cosworth MP4/1B were
also faster than Rosberg’s Williams FW08 at 100.3. None of the season’s eleven
winning drivers scored more than two wins each, in this, by far the closest,
multi-car championship of all.
1983: this
championship was very close between cars, Piquet’s Brabham-BMW BT 50 ranking
third-fastest and rating at 100.2. The Ferrari 126C3 being fastest at 100.0,
and surprisingly, the Alfa Romeo 183T next at 100.1. Piquet won three times, his
closest rival, Prost’s Renault RE40 four. But Prost’s Renault car-rated at just
100.6 and also scored only two second places and a third, Piquet gaining more points
through his three seconds and two third places. The Alfa Romeo turbo V8 lacked
a driver fast enough to exploit its speed, Alfa Romeo’s number one de Cesaris
running at a driver-rating of 100.7 against the ultimate 100.0 of Piquet and
Prost.
1985: a close one
this season between three cars. After dominating 1984 the McLaren-Porsche had
faster rivals for 1985: the Ferrari 156/85 top, car-rated at 100.0 with the
Lotus-Renault 97T at 100.1, while championship-winner Prost’s McLaren-Porsche
rated at a close 100.2. Prost was a superior, faster driver than Senna
/Lotus-Renault and Alboreto/Ferrari. This was a championship clearly won by the
driver. Alain Prost..
1986: this championship
was won, like 1958, thanks to the skewed arbitrariness of the official points
system. Title-winner Prost’s 100.5 car-rated McLaren-Porsche won only four
races, while Mansell’s 100.0-car-rated Williams-Honda won five times and
team-mate Piquet’s Williams-Honda won four races. The Williams-Honda was
clearly the fastest car all year. Two other cars were also faster than the McLaren-Porsche:
the Ligier-Renault JS27 which equal, top-rated with the Williams-Hondas at
100.0, and the Lotus-Renault at 100.4. The Ligier drivers Arnoux and Lafitte
were far too slow to win even a single race, the Senna/Lotus-Renault too
unreliable, despite its speed and eight poles.
1989: this will
be a contentious one according to my analysis and car ratings:
championship-winner Prost’s McLaren-Honda MP4/5 was rated at 100.3 on my System,
Honda-engine-favoured team-mate Senna’s McLaren-Honda at 100.0. Unknown to the
McLaren team, Honda had supplied Senna with superior engines, yet despite his
clear superiority over Prost in poles (13:2), wins (6:4) and sheer speed, the quirky and in my opinion, contentious
championship points award went to Prost.
1991: like 1962,
1969, 1972, 1983 and 1985, the 1991 season was between three close-matched
cars; championship-winner Senna’s McLaren-Honda MP4/6 at 100.1 and the high-tech
Williams-Renault FW14 on 100.0 and the beautiful, new Jordan-Cosworth 191 at
100.1. Senna was just too good a driver and dominated to win seven races and
scored eight poles. Williams-Renault driver Mansell scored five wins but suffered
too many retirements.
1995: this
championship was won by Michael Schumacher’s driver superiority. Schumacher’s
Benetton-Renault car rated at 100.2 against the Hill Williams-Renault’s fastsest
car-rating of 100.0. Schumacher and his team strategy were just too good, winning
nine of the 17 races. Despite his faster car, Damon Hill only scored four wins.
The Ferrari 412T2 car-rated at 100.2 was as fast as Schumacher’s Benetton-Renault,
but drivers Berger and Alesi were too slow, managing only one win between them.
2001: in almost a
carbon-copy of his driver superiority of 1995, Schumacher won the 2001
championship in his 100.2-rated Ferrari F2001. Two cars were faster, the
McLaren-Mercedes MP4/16 fastest of all at 100.0, and the Williams-BMW FW23 at 100.1.
Schumachers driver superiority and the Italian team’s impressive’, overall
competence ensured an 11 pole and nine win domination! McLaren’s Hakkinen had
slowed dramatically this season, from exhaustion and stress, he and team-mate
Coulthard only winning twice each. Williams-BMW drivers Ralf Schumacher and
Montoya were not experienced or fast enough to score more than their three and
one win each.
2003: this time
winner Michael Schumacher had almost the fastest car, his Ferrari F2003A rating
at 100.1, slower than the McLaren-Mercedes MP4/17’s 100.0, and equal to the
Williams-BMW FW 25 and the Renault R203 at 100.1. Michael Schumacher managed
six wins and five poles to take the title. The closest rivals, the Ralf
Schumacher and Montoya Williams-BMWs scored four wins, the McLaren-Mercedes only
two and Renault one. Their young drivers (Ralf Schumacher, Montoya, Raikkonen
and veteran Coulthard) were just not fast enough to challenge Michael Schumacher
consistently, and nor were their teams quite as competent as Ferrari was.
2004: this season
the Schumacher/Ferrari ‘steamroller’ was utterly dominant, winning 13 races
from 8 poles. Team-mate Barrichello won twice from four poles. And yet the
Ferrari F2004 rated as only the second-fastest car at 100.1. The car that was
faster was the generally unacknowledged BAR-Honda 006, which top-car- rated at
100.0. Many have and will disagree with my System’s car rating here. However
perceptions of Ferrari’s utter dominance and superiority cloud the issue. Main
reason is that the BAR-Honda team was led by the talented but yet inexperienced
Jenson Button who driver rated at 100.4. Schumacher’s 100.0 driver-rating more
than made-up the BAR-Honda’s 0.1 car advantage enjoyed by Button, to the tune
of a comfortable 0.3%. Even Barrichello, driver-rated at 1002, had 0.1 in hand
over the Button/BAR-Honda combination, and scored four poles and two wins to the
one pole and no win for Button.
2005: with the
Ferrari cars sidelined by an unexpected lack of speed, this season was opened
to two new cars and a new young generation of star driver championship
challengers: Alonso/Renault R25 and Raikkonen/ McLaren-Mercedes MP4/20. Alonso
won the championship in his Renault car that rated at 100.2. He scored seven
wins to equal Raikkonen’s seven! Their pole-setting was 5:6 in Raikkonen’s
favour. The results indicate car equality, but analysis of the 19 races, in
four of which Raikkonen’s McLaren was grid-penalised ten places each. Consequently
he arguably lost at least one or two more wins, for the McLaren-Mercedes worked
out as the fastest car at 100.0 rating. That is 0.2% faster than Alonso’s
Renault.
2008: this was
one of the closest-fought seasons of all; not as many cars vying for the
championship as in 1982, but the four combinations that did were close-matched.
Championship winner Hamilton’s McLaren-Mercedes MP4/23 car-rated at 100.4, and ranked
only third fastest to the Ferrari F2008 at 100.0 and the BMW-Sauber F1.08 at
100.1. Hamilton won five races and set seven
poles for McLaren, Massa
six poles and six wins for Ferrari. Each scored two seconds, Hamilton three thirds
to Massa ’s two.
Obviously close-matched results. But in my opinion, my ratings tell a fuller,
more accurate comparative picture between combinations, cars and drivers than
race results. Hamilton was slightly the superior
driver to Massa .
2009: Button won
the six of the first seven races to clinch the championship in what was
initially the fastest car, the Honda-designed, Brawn-Mercedes. As the season
progressed other teams adopted the Brawn-Mercedes’s rear-end, double-diffuser,
aerodynamic configuration. Consequently the Red Bull-Renault became the
season’s fastest car on average, to top-rate at 100.0, relegating the
Brawn-Mercedes to 100.1. Button won no more races in the second half of the
season, while Red Bull-Renault drivers Vettel and Webber scored five wins. Compared
to Brawn-Mercedes’s other driver, Barichello’s two wins in the last half of the
season, confirms the Red Bull-Renault car’s superiority, for Button and
Barricchello were very evenly matched as drivers with the Red Bull-Renault pair
of Vettel and Webber, all driver-rating at 100.3 to 100.4. So Button really did
not win this championship in a slower car.
These 26 occasions of the 63 seasons since 1950 represent
41% when drivers won championships in cars that were not the fastest. That means
that 59% of seasons were won by drivers who had the fastest cars.
CONCLUSIONS:
However, as with all analyses of F1 racing, the complexities
are such that each season requires careful and detailed study and explanation before,
indeed if, any general conclusions can be drawn from this topic. For some idea
of the several factors involved, see my previous blog-post “Dominant Drivers”. No
direct driver comparisons can be drawn from this essay. For example, Piquet won
the championship in 1981 with numerically the slowest car ever, his
Brabham-Cosworth BT49 being rated at 100.9 versus the fastest, the turbo
Renault at 100.0. However the bare figures do not tell all: his real rival was
not the fastest-rated but unreliable Renault, but the Williams-Cosworth FW07
which rated at 100.5; this reduced Piquet’s Brabham-Cosworth’s disadvantage to
just 0.4%, which is not so exceptional.
Five or six seasons’s titles were won by cars 0.5% off-pace
(Rosberg/Williams similar situation to Piquet/Brabham in 1981) ; three at 0.4%
including Piquet in 1981; six at 0.3% off; five at 0.2% and six or seven at
just 0.1% off. My approximate figures here are based on measures against the
strongest rival car as well as the mathematically fastest, as in the 1981
example.
While championships and race results provide some indication
of driver and car comparison, in my opinion my Rating System is a more accurate
assessment of inter-driver and inter-car comparison. Championships involve too
many outside factors for too-close comparisons to be made.
©
Patrick O’Brien. Nothing from this page can be used without the permission of
Patrick E. O’Brien.
I can't really believe that both McLaren and Williams were faster than Ferrari in 2001. The McLaren had a huge power-deficit compared to both Ferrari and Williams, while the Williams chassis was just average. The Ferrari was also much more reliable (and McLaren was unable to make a reliable launch-control system). I do think, however, that the gap was not as big as the final standings suggest. There were several races at which Coulthard should have done better (he made critical mistakes in France and England). He could have been much and much closer, which really shows how good the McLaren chassis must have been.
ReplyDeleteThank you Hoofd for your reply. I agree with you the difference in 2001 top three car speeds was not great: my stats made the Ferrari just 0.2% slower than the McLaren and 0.1% slower than the Williams. However the driver differences were much greater: my calculations show Michael at 0.4% or 0.4 seconds per lap faster than DC and Ralf, 0.7 than J-P and a whole 0.9 ahead of the tired and slowed Hakkinen. This more than made up the difference in car speeds. Which is why the Ferrari appeared to be the fastest car too.
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