sk47
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2020
- Threads
- 32
- Messages
- 6,818
- Reaction score
- 3,162
- Location
- North Eastern TN
- First Name
- Jeff
- Vehicle(s)
- Chevy Silverado & Nissan Sentra SE
Hello; You are correct in that any number of decisions different from what happened could have changed the outcomes for all 20 drivers over the course of a season. Here is an analogy I use sometimes about a basketball game outcome.Everyone in F1 admits that money equals a faster car. There is even a formula for every so much spent equals a hundredth, tenth, whatever.
So it is not unreasonable to suggest if Mercedes also went over budget by several millions that their drivers would have been faster on every lap. Someone would have to then go back on the season and mathematically figure out if it would have mattered or not...which in and of itself is tough because this would have also changed decisions on pitting, tires, etc.
However, given how close the championship was it is not unreasonable to think this might have changed who was the champion.
Say a player throws up a last second buzzer beater shot that gives his team a win. Lots of folks say he made the winning shot. True enough in a narrow sense, but omits all the other points his team scored up to than last moment. The points of the player who made the first basket also were critical to the outcome.
Thing is the race director (masa ???) at the time apparently had the authority to make a call and did so. That avenue was tried in order to attempt to rewrite history and has failed. That person (masa??) lost his job it seems in a cancel culture sort of way. The outcome stands.
Now another attempt to get the outcome desired by an upset group in in the works. Some sort of fuzzy logic around how the Mercedes would have been faster if they had outspent other teams. Two points follow. One is that seasons MB was the generally faster car or at least equal to the closest competitor. We saw how close the cars were a number of times. Turned out a set of new tires made the difference. One teams call worked out better that the other.
The other is the idea that a minor over spending by MB would automatically make a difference. How many times has some NFL team paid big bucks to draft a top pick who never made the grade is one example. Back to my previously made point. The MB was already a top car and had the lead in hand but decided to keep track position on older tires. Just a close call or rather a call that almost worked if the race was a couple of corners shorter.
As to whether I know much about F1 as one member questions, I do have a long history of following the sport. I also have a long history of following NASCAR. Thing is NASCAR determined we fans did not like seeing races end under a yellow flag. We want to see the drivers race to the end. I think it is the same for F1 fans and even F1 bosses know that. No matter if this latest ploy to change an outcome works the fact remains the season ended with the top competitors actually racing each other on the track.
Sponsored
