You're quite wrong about their respective qualifying pace.GPR -A wrote: ↑11 Oct 2018, 19:15I see there is too much of hype for Rosberg as a driver here. No other driver, other than Prost had that lucrative opportunity of qualifying right behind his team mate, regardless of how poor he performed in qualifying, because there was no credible competition. MP4/4 and MP4/5 had no competition and I had posted comparison runs in the McLaren thread of Prost and Senna, where the average gap between the two was more than a second! Yet, no one in between them. Same applies to Rosberg, while the qualifying performance difference was an average of 0.3 to 0.4 second (thanks to modern sophisticated cars and obviously, learning from the team mate's data), there were times when Lewis got pole by over half a second and yet, it was Nico who was next to him. 2016 Monza was a classic example where Lewis got pole by half a second and when he fluffed the start, it was Rosberg who was taking advantage. In all his years, Rosberg never had any issues in qualifying, whereas Lewis had a number of failures that didn't allow him to challenge Rosberg in quali, which in turn gifted wins to Rosberg.
Unlike no other teams before, Mercedes brought rules of engagement that always preferred the leading driver the right to pit first. Despite that, a number of times Rosberg was the beneficiary of the rule break (Bahrain 2015, Austria 2016), while Lewis never enjoyed that. In 2015 Monaco, a win was taken away from Lewis and gifted to Rosberg. Austria 2016 was almost a gift too. In Russia 2016, Lewis was asked not to charge towards Rosberg by quoting a water issue in engine. 2016 was full of questionable decisions from Mercedes and not to mention the mechanics swap. Despite having a absolutely trouble free year on mechanical side, Rosberg still needed a host of issues for Lewis in the early part of the season, that forced Lewis to take an extra PU and penalty for that, and most importantly, a Lewis' DNF to get the title.
No other team mate ever enjoyed so many advantages against one of the potent drivers of all times, which enabled an average Joe to come across as more than that. In the end, Rosberg appeared more competitive than he really was, due to various factors. His race craft was as good as that was on display in Spain and Austria 2016 and not to mention the hydrophobic driving qualities.
Of 52 qualifying sessions where both set times, the average difference was 0.053 seconds; Hamilton being 0.053 seconds faster.
If you remove outliers from each of 2014, 2015 and 2016 - i.e. Hamilton's best performance, and Rosberg's best performance - the gap is 0.106 seconds in Hamilton's favor.
If you also remove all wet qualifying sessions, the difference is 0.085 seconds.
Take your pick, none of these differentials are anything like as much as you proclaim.
Of the extreme cases, Hamilton qualified ahead by 0.5 of a second (or more) on only 6 occasions; Rosberg managed this on 2 occasions.
To suggest Rosberg was consistently so far behind would be forgetting those occasions where Rosberg qualified in front of Hamilton; 28 of 59 races in fact - roughly half of the time. Even if you remove the instances where Hamilton experienced an impaired qualifying session, being unable to set a time, Rosberg still qualified ahead approximately 40% of the time.
There is absolutely no mistaking the fact that Hamilton was faster than Rosberg, especially during races. Simultaneously, the data simply doesn't support your supposition of an enormous gulf in performance between the two during qualifying.