Team bosses against Mercedes‘ dominance

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Team bosses demand parity between Formula 1 teams after three years of the utter dominance of Mercedes. It is blamed to chase fans away from the sport and cause disinterest towards the pinnacle of motorsport.

Formula 1 is dominated by the German-Anglo team Mercedes for the third consecutive year. In 2014, new technical regulations were introduced which included a package of modified aerodynamic rules and a revolutionary complex hybrid powertrain.

Mercedes has excelled in the new era since then. The team won 49 out of 57 races over the three years and grabbed the pole position 54 times out of 57 qualifying sessions. Most of Mercedes’ rare fails were caused by crashes between its drivers Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton rather than mechanical issues.

Apart from some interesting races, real racing has vanished as rival teams could not pose any threat on Mercedes.

Its dominance can be explained by its superior powertrain which had an enormous advantage in terms of pure power output in 2014 at the dawn of the new era. Despite to the efforts of the other engine manufacturers Ferrari, Renault and Honda, Mercedes still holds the upper hand in terms of power output in the third year of the new engine formula.

The German manufacturer claimed that its rivals closed the gap significantly. It is party right as all its three rivals decreased the gap in terms of pure power output. Ferrari are now estimated to have a deficit of 20 bhp, Renault 45 bhp and Honda 70 bhp.

However, the power output is not the only parameter which defines the characteristics of a powertrain. Mercedes still has advantages in many other areas, for example its special qualifying mode which can also be used in intense parts of races. The amazing reliability of its powertrain (despite Lewis Hamilton’s woes this season) and its unique assembly of the entire powertrain enables a low centre of gravity. This all adds to performance in different ways.

Team bosses were asked during the weekend of the Mexican GP what could make Formula 1 more appealing. Toro Rosso team principal Franz Tost answered that Formula 1 needs close fighting at the front.

“We need interesting races and if they crash into each other, they crash into each other, this is what people always want to see. Formula One is also entertainment. And currently, we take too much care about all the safety issues and so on. Formula One is dangerous, we know this, but currently at the race track, if you look, nothing happens any more.”

The Austrian conceded Mercedes’ dominance makes F1 boring.

“Some friends said to me ‘I don’t watch Formula One any more because there are the two Mercedes in front. If they don’t crash on the first lap, the race is gone. I can sleep somewhere else, not in front of the TV.’ This is absolutely wrong. First of all, we need to come up with a parity between the different teams.”

Tost thinks the fact that Mercedes’ dominance have indicated the outcome of the championship after only a few races into the season harms F1.

“The ideal case would be two or three teams would fight for the championship until the last race, Constructors’ championship as well as Drivers’, not as the last years when everything is decided with a couple of races to go, before the end,” concluded Tost.

McLaren racing director Eric Boullier agreed with Tost as he underlined the importance of real racing which is what motorsport is all about.

“I agree with Franz on at least one point: we want to have close racing which is why the fans like... which is why we like racing as well, and I think it’s going to come after every change of regulations, especially the last one with the power units.”

“Obviously there is a lot of disparity between the cars and the performance but if you’re back to 2012 and 2013, I think if I remember, in the first ten races there were nine different winners.”

“The big point’s really excitement, isn’t it? We need good, close racing, compelling racing,” Williams CEO Mike O’Driscoll emphasised what F1 needs to be more enticing again.