ScottB wrote: ↑09 Jun 2018, 15:11
Fulcrum wrote: ↑09 Jun 2018, 13:25
ScottB wrote: ↑09 Jun 2018, 12:25
We’ve got three teams who can win races this year, maybe not every race, but certainly at some.
I’m struggling to remember a time with more than that.
We’ve had spells of outright dominance by Merc, Red Bull, Ferrari, Mclaren and Williams in the last few decades, but more than three teams fighting at the front? I guess 2012 had RBR, Ferrari and Mclaren battling for the title, and 99 had Mclaren and Ferrari, with Jordan winning a few, but I can’t think of any that had a fourth team at the front.
It’s good to have some competition at the front of course, but this idea that things need to be more unpredictable / any team should be able to win doesn’t strike me as very ‘F1.’
2012. Mclaren, Ferrari, Mercedes, Red Bull, Williams, Lotus.
2013. Lotus, Red Bull, Ferrari, Mercedes, before Red Bull ended up dominating.
I hope the relative competition lasts season long, but they usually don't. One or two teams typically produce a significant upgrade the others can't replicate. It would be great if this were not the case this year though.
Williams, Lotus and Merc weren’t in the title fight those seasons though, and that Williams win was an outright fluke! Merc were the only one of those you could stretch to including in the latter season, they were just turning it on at one race type performances.
As said, I can’t recall any seasons in recent decades were more than three teams had a genuine shot at either title. It’s always tended to be one or two, with three an outlier. Even this year I don’t think I’d include RBR as a title challenger, but I guess we’ll see.
Ultimately, as you say, one or two teams just do a better job and move clear, that’s long been the way, and I don’t see how you keep the field artificially close together (though the field overall is far closer than it was 10/20 years ago) without becoming more like a spec series.
If Red Bull are included this year then you can have Lotus-Renault for sure in 2012 and 2013. More often than not it looked quicker than Ferrari, 2012 especially.
I think it's not just the number, 2 or 3 is normal enough as you say, but it's the prospect of one of them relies entirely on the PU and that no-one else is going to join them so we already know it will be the same for the next 2 seasons at least and Red Bull are reliant on either Renault or Honda or it will be Lewis and Seb again swapping wins.
It's just dull for anyone not attached to either, they've swapped having the best car for 9 seasons now and what will likely be 11 by the time 2021 comes around, it gets a little boring so any way that it can get livened up a bit, and team mates being the obvious way to do it, will be hoped for by most but I think everyone understands why it remains as it is at least.
It better to hope they get competitive team mates rather than hope they end up in Alonso's situation in cars too far away to compete. Having the best drivers at the sharp end is what most want after all.