I bring it up because it's an important detail in the 2016 season. Rosberg did a great job in 2016 but he was undoubtedly helped by Hamilton losing 25 points at a crucial stage in the title race. That they finished the season just 5 points apart shows that losing 25 points was important.RonMexico wrote: ↑16 Nov 2022, 01:08I don't understand why you keep bringing it up. Unreliability happens. How many engine failures has Hamilton had in his entire career? Not many I'd bet.MadMax wrote: ↑16 Nov 2022, 00:50If Hamilton had won in Malaysia instead of having his engine go pop, Suzuka wouldn't have mattered on its own. Malaysia happened before Suzuka. If Hamilton had won in Malaysia, he'd have had 405 points at the end of the season if the other races all went as they did. If all other races went as they did, Rosberg would have finished with 382 (he gained 3 points in Malaysia thanks to finishing 3rd instead of 4th). Rosberg would have needed to win two more of the remaining races on top of Suzuka to beat Hamilton. That's how important Malaysia was to the outcome.
Rosberg had the electrical fault in Singapore 2014 and the mgu k(I think) in AD 2014 which finished his very real title chances that season.
However, he still could have won the title by winning the last 5 races. Rosberg needed to win one to take it out of Hamiltons hands and he managed that at the first opportunity.
In 2014, Rosberg had 2 retirements, Hamilton had 3 and Hamilton took the title 384 points to 317 points. So Rosberg's retirements didn't play the same role at all as the single extra retirement did in 2016.