FoxHound wrote:
Some call it the Ferrari golden age. Some people enjoyed it and called it racing. But with this sort of built in advantage(technical veto), and the like of Byrne and Bridgestone providing you with the best of the best, I think it plausible that Raikkonen, Hakkinen, Alonso and possibly even Montoya(Schumacher rivals), could achieve near as dammit the same statistics at Ferrari had they been in the seat rather than Micheal.
This is not sour grapes, it's just my deduction and I appreciate some will disagree with this. Pure speed you cannot verify from looking at a spreadsheet. Pure speed is something you see and feel rather than calculate.
Of the last Generation I would reckon Hakkinen was the balls to the wall fastest, I cannot prove that. He just seemed to have a knack of keeping it on the black stuff for 1min 30 odd seconds while all hell was let loose.
I don't think the aforementioned drivers apart form Alonso are good candidates at all:
Raikkonen was outqualified by Massa more often and had quite a bit less poles than Massa in his Ferrari stint. He is also regularly being outqualified by Grosjean this year. Raikkonen is a good, clean racer but one of his weaknesses is one lap speed.
Everybody gives Newey as the number one reason for RBR success but a combination like Newey, McLaren and the Mercedes engine did not produce any WDC or WCC during Raikkonen time.
Montoya was teammates with Ralf for four years. It was close but even Ralf Schumacher just edged him in qualifying teammate battle
As for Hakkinen, when Hakkinen had superior car the championships went down to the wire. When Schumacher had better car it was all over long before the season end...
The only candidate left is Alonso. If I am not mistaken Alonso is 15-16 against Truli and 8-9 against Hamilton and those two guys are really really good qualifiers. But my belief is Alonso is a better racer than a qualifying specialist.
You have also listed the achievements of Ferrari's of Micheal and Rubens. Those statistics are also lopsidedly due to Micheal. In those 6 years as teammates: 41 poles for Micheal, 11 for Rubens. 49 wins for Micheal and 9 for Rubens. To put things in perspective: Rubens only managed to be the runner up twice in those six years with those Ferraris! The older version of Rubens managed to win the qualifying battle vs Button when they were teammates for 4 years.
So I never buy this naive view that a bunch of guys would do it given the same circumstances argument....Vettel gets 15 poles in 2011, Webber would never be able to do that with the same equipment....
Vettel and Hamilton are good candidates though. I think Vettel is as good as it gets during qualifying...