http://goo.gl/ronqwg
Wonder what we can read into this, and what can we expect.
I don't think he will say this unless there is more shenanigans that is going to go unpunished!
There's one huge hole in this theory: The FIA has been hard at work to make the sport a business and spectacle, finding ways to enhance the show on sundays by adding tyres that degrade faster, forcing to use two quite different tyre compounds and most importantly, DRS and KERS, to increase the possibility of an exciting race, where the given qualified order on Saturday is less important. These things exist for the sole reason, to not make it a train where the fastest car starting on pole doesn't necessarely finish first at the checkered flag.SidSidney wrote:Why does pole conversion matter? A pole position means you have a fast - perhaps dominant - car, in principle capable of getting around faster than anyone else. So you should be able to convert that into a lot of wins, assuming all the usual stuff about reliability, crashing etc, but that is the same for everybody. If your conversion ratio of poles with a dominant car is weak, you will not win or score enough points to win championships even though you are in the best possible position to do so.
So we have a deal? If he wins, you bury that theory forever. No third limited edition in six months or any of that ok?SidSidney wrote:He won't. But I still like him.SectorOne wrote:If Hamilton wins the title.
Hey Smikle, I thought you gave up on Hamilton and became a Vettel guy. I distinctly remember that.n smikle wrote:His team of Engineer's were not smart enough to detect that the KERS will fail. I guess F1 drivers should have 1st class degrees in engineering and 5 years experience now? hahaConstructr wrote:Lewis may in fact be the "quicker" driver but to win a Championship, a driver must be smart, too. A little luck doesn't hurt either. Nico is definitely the "smarter" driver. If Lewis had maintained a 2-3 second gap in Canada until closer to the end, he probably wouldn't have cooked his rear brakes and might have been able to overtake Nico and won. Lewis has had a bit of bad luck this year as well.
Just out of curiosity, when and where did Laudmouth say that?SectorOne wrote:It´s funny because your data proved Hamilton has been the quicker driver so far.LionKing wrote:The premise of Lewis being the quicker driver has also no basis, just wishful thinking
Then you decided to split qualis in wet and dry (like some other guy did) and then make excuses of "he sucks in the wet"
And proceeded to only count laptime delta in dry conditions.
What sort of delta do you get if you....you know....count ALL the quali sessions?
Even if data isn´t your thing, Lauda has said that from his point of view Lewis is 1-2 tenths quicker.
Which funnily enough fits the 2 tenths on average advantage he´s had over Rosberg this year.
And again just to reiterate, the average gap in qualifying between Ham and Ros has increased from last year.
Actually no. When you compare race-to-race to last year - the time difference between them is smaller than in last year's qualifyings. China was the only anomaly with a 1.283s gap, but in exact same races this year the gap is smaller. And I am talking only about the gap between thier best qualifying times, and not about who outqualified who in any given race.SectorOne wrote:And again just to reiterate, the average gap in qualifying between Ham and Ros has increased from last year.
He never said that, there´s a gap between the two sentences and they are not related.Pierce89 wrote:Just out of curiosity, when and where did Laudmouth say that?
http://en.espnf1.com/mercedes/motorspor ... 60185.html Lauda's quote is here.Pierce89 wrote:Just out of curiosity, when and where did Laudmouth say that?SectorOne wrote:It´s funny because your data proved Hamilton has been the quicker driver so far.LionKing wrote:The premise of Lewis being the quicker driver has also no basis, just wishful thinking
Then you decided to split qualis in wet and dry (like some other guy did) and then make excuses of "he sucks in the wet"
And proceeded to only count laptime delta in dry conditions.
What sort of delta do you get if you....you know....count ALL the quali sessions?
Even if data isn´t your thing, Lauda has said that from his point of view Lewis is 1-2 tenths quicker.
Which funnily enough fits the 2 tenths on average advantage he´s had over Rosberg this year.
And again just to reiterate, the average gap in qualifying between Ham and Ros has increased from last year.
Lewis retired in more costly positions though.LionKing wrote: As for DNFs of Button and Lewis, we have discussed this a few times before but again the difference in number was coming from the number of accidents of Lewis orherwise the mechanical issues was 6-5 as fas as I remember.
Actually yes.the user wrote:Actually no.SectorOne wrote:And again just to reiterate, the average gap in qualifying between Ham and Ros has increased from last year.
Ah yea, we call that cherry picked data. You can probably get any answer you want out of cherry picked data.the user wrote:And I am talking only about the gap between thier best qualifying times,
-SectorOne wrote:Actually yes.the user wrote:Actually no.SectorOne wrote:And again just to reiterate, the average gap in qualifying between Ham and Ros has increased from last year.
The average qualifying gap between the two in 2013 was -0.158s, in 2014 up to this point it´s -0.237s
Ah yea, we call that cherry picked data. You can probably get any answer you want out of cherry picked data.the user wrote:And I am talking only about the gap between thier best qualifying times,
I could for example make a claim and say Hamilton has the lowest average grid position after penalties.
But that would be incorrect and could only be done through cherrypicking my data.
Taking all data and the answer is Rosberg.
Another example was a guy who split the wet and dry sessions because he felt Rosberg sucked in the wet.
Sky is the limit when it comes to cherrypicking.
Why not split the dry and the wet and throw the dry weather data out since it's a damn well known fact that it takes more skill to drive better in the wet, especially with the same carSectorOne wrote: Another example was a guy who split the wet and dry sessions because he felt Rosberg sucked in the wet.
Sky is the limit when it comes to cherrypicking.
No it´s not, i´m merely taking all the data there is from both seasons.the user wrote:you're comparing the whole of 2013 to only a part of 2014. That is the same cherry picking you're talking about.
When you learn how to write properly.the user wrote:Learn some reading coprehension please.
Which doesn't make your comparison correct.SectorOne wrote:No it´s not, i´m merely taking all the data there is from both seasons.
English is not my native language. If there were no dots - there would be no sentences. So I don't see what the problem was. Anyway, sorry if my post was hard to read.SectorOne wrote:When you learn how to write properly.
It´s a big blob of text and i´m glad you at least had the common courtesy to add dots after ever sentence.
(Using multiple question marks does not enhance the effect either)
Ok.SectorOne wrote:But let´s get back to the actual discussion, i would have to assume we are both correct, if you have the data please post it up so we can take a look at it.