LOL almost forgot about Ide.bhall II wrote:I think any discussion of F1's worst is incomplete without at least a passing mention of Yuji Ide, a driver so challenged by the notion that only a single car can safely occupy any given space at any given time that the FIA revoked his Super License after only four races.
Ide only had 4 starts (so it is a bit harsh to include him, but yes, he was a bit of a "gumby"), and the cars in de Cesaris' time (80's and early 90's) were a lot more unreliable. When de Cesaris had a good car he either got in the points or crashed, so he does hold the record (136 DNFs)...Edax wrote:LOL almost forgot about Ide.
Another honorable mention would be Andrea de "Crasheris" Cesaris. I think he has had more crashes than most drivers have races.
This is where the sport is at unfortunately, genuine talent (i.e. Jolyon Palmer) can't get drives as they don't come with $$$, and hacks and also-rans (i.e. Marcus Ericson, Pastor Maldonado) get drives and don't perform. This is supposed to be the 20 best drivers on the planet...Whodeany13 wrote:Lets face it, if it wasn't for PDVSA and Venezuela he wouldn't be where he is now. Fact!! Get rid of him from F1 for a Jolyon Palmer or someone deserving from a feeder series, with pedigree and talent!
I couldn't agree more!! Bernie and the CVC have a lot to answer for, the prizemoney pay scale is just horrendous. And what Bernie has done to Manor/Marrusia after what they did in Australia (you will never see them get airtime even if they are the first and only out on the track, to prevent potential sponsors buying into the team). Jules Bianchi (wish him all the best) earnt that 9th place in the constructors and is therefor their money. No German GP because of no $$$ agreement. C'mon stop being so hungry!!Wayne DR wrote:This is where the sport is at unfortunately, genuine talent (i.e. Jolyon Palmer) can't get drives as they don't come with $$$, and hacks and also-rans (i.e. Marcus Ericson, Pastor Maldonado) get drives and don't perform. This is supposed to be the 20 best drivers on the planet...Whodeany13 wrote:Lets face it, if it wasn't for PDVSA and Venezuela he wouldn't be where he is now. Fact!! Get rid of him from F1 for a Jolyon Palmer or someone deserving from a feeder series, with pedigree and talent!
How much did Ericson pay Sauber, 15 Million Euro? Who needs sponsors, just go and hire yourself 5 or 6 drivers! (...and then get your hand stuck in the cookie jar by van de Garde. OOPS! Honestly, how did they see that one playing out?)
We used to have "Privateers" rather than "Pay Drivers", and the system worked. If you could drive, you would Qualify to race, score some points and eventually a big team would pick you up. If you couldn't drive, you wouldn't Qualify, not race, get bored and go away...
Maldonado would probably have much higher DNF ratio if we still had gravel traps, just look at the start of yesterdays race!Wayne DR wrote:Ide only had 4 starts (so it is a bit harsh to include him, but yes, he was a bit of a "gumby"), and the cars in de Cesaris' time (80's and early 90's) were a lot more unreliable. When de Cesaris had a good car he either got in the points or crashed, so he does hold the record (136 DNFs)...Edax wrote:LOL almost forgot about Ide.
Another honorable mention would be Andrea de "Crasheris" Cesaris. I think he has had more crashes than most drivers have races.
Below is a summary:
Pastor Maldonado - '11 to present
Starts: 81
Finishes "in the Points": 8 (9.9%)
DNFs: 28 (34.6%)
Andre de Cesaris - '80 to '94
Starts: 211
Finishes "in the Points": 22 (10.4%)
DNFs: 136 (64.5%)
Others in the running:
Adrian Campos - '87 & '88
Starts: 17
Finishes "in the Points": 0
DNFs: 14 (82%)
Yuji Ide - '05
Starts: 4
Finishes "in the Points": 0
DNFs: 3 (75%)
Taki Inoue - '94 & '95
Starts: 18
Finishes "in the Points": 0
DNFs: 13 (72%)
Luca Badoer - '93, '95, '96, '99 & '09
Starts: 50
Finishes "in the Points": 0
DNFs: 25 (50%)
I don't think it can be compared by just looking at stats. F1 has changed a lot throughout the years - generally fewer DNFs overall. I think it should be compared with the average DNFs of the entire F1 grid during that season.Wayne DR wrote:Ide only had 4 starts (so it is a bit harsh to include him, but yes, he was a bit of a "gumby"), and the cars in de Cesaris' time (80's and early 90's) were a lot more unreliable. When de Cesaris had a good car he either got in the points or crashed, so he does hold the record (136 DNFs)...Edax wrote:LOL almost forgot about Ide.
Another honorable mention would be Andrea de "Crasheris" Cesaris. I think he has had more crashes than most drivers have races.
Below is a summary:
Pastor Maldonado - '11 to present
Starts: 81
Finishes "in the Points": 8 (9.9%)
DNFs: 28 (34.6%)
Andre de Cesaris - '80 to '94
Starts: 211
Finishes "in the Points": 22 (10.4%)
DNFs: 136 (64.5%)
...
Nathanael F1 wrote:I don't think it can be compared by just looking at stats. F1 has changed a lot throughout the years - generally fewer DNFs overall. I think it should be compared with the average DNFs of the entire F1 grid during that season.Wayne DR wrote:Ide only had 4 starts (so it is a bit harsh to include him, but yes, he was a bit of a "gumby"), and the cars in de Cesaris' time (80's and early 90's) were a lot more unreliable. When de Cesaris had a good car he either got in the points or crashed, so he does hold the record (136 DNFs)...Edax wrote:LOL almost forgot about Ide.
Another honorable mention would be Andrea de "Crasheris" Cesaris. I think he has had more crashes than most drivers have races.
Below is a summary:
Pastor Maldonado - '11 to present
Starts: 81
Finishes "in the Points": 8 (9.9%)
DNFs: 28 (34.6%)
Andre de Cesaris - '80 to '94
Starts: 211
Finishes "in the Points": 22 (10.4%)
DNFs: 136 (64.5%)
...