Phil wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 18:40
So I've run the numbers through my sheet:
As far as permutations go, it hasn't really changed much. Vettel is still entirely consistent with the trend so far this year. When he finishes behind Hamilton, he is usually not far behind. In reality, finishing 4th to Hamilton 2nd is actually better than if Hamilton had won and him finishing runner up (net-loss 7 points vs 6).
The points gap is now 34 points in Hamiltons favor with 7 wins vs 4. Vettel however has way more 2nd places, so assuming Vettel draws even on wins and they equalize on points, Vettel would take the WDC.
The odds have slightly increased for Hamilton on the basis that he "won" Malaysia relative to Vettel and now Vettel is faced with having one race less, meaning more pressure for him on doing well at the next 5 races. This means that if Hamilton secures one more win, he can afford to finish 3rd in all of the upcoming races and he will be crowned WDC with 1 point (366 vs 365 points).
They haven't changed much from Vettels perspective. If Vettel wins all 5 remaining races, he will be WDC, regardless what Hamilton does. More so, if he wins 4 races, assuming Hamilton wins the 5th race, there's a high probability that Vettel could still win the championship on the basis that for Hamilton to prevent that, he would have to finish 3rd in every race at least. This is probably quite unlikely, as Hamilton has finished on average in position 3.8 across (when not winning). Malaysia has also shown that Mercedes either have a very quick car and if it isn't, there's a high probability that RedBull is also in the hunt, which could potentially push Mercedes further down the grid, meaning a bigger net loss.
Having that said: if Hamilton wins 2 more races, he'll be in a very comfortable position in that he can afford to come 5th, 5th and 6th in the other 3 races to still grab the championship. Alternatively, he could also afford a DNF and a 4th and 3rd place. Another possibility: 6th, 6th and 4th.
If Hamilton wins 3 races, he is WDC and can afford two DNFs.
Adding to that, some things to consider:
- Ferrari continue to show very strong pace on all race tracks
- RedBull has increasingly become a very strong competitor
- Vettel gearbox penalty coming in Japan?
- Vettel/Ferrari have 2 new engines (PU4&5) for the rest of the year if I am not mistaken
- How vulnerable will Mercedes be on any of the next 5 tracks?
- Mercedes performance question mark in Mexico (high altitude) and Brazil
- Mercedes is probably still a force in qualifying which will be great on tracks where overtaking is difficult
- Vettel can no longer afford RedBull to take wins, unless Mercedes run into big reliability issues:
- Easy math: 35 gap / 5 races = 7 points per race is what he needs to overcome on average.
- that's the gap between 1st vs 2nd, 2nd vs 5th, 3rd vs 6th, 4th vs 8th, 5th vs 9th and 6th vs 10th or worse.