ChrisF1 wrote: ↑31 Aug 2018, 08:53
Considering the intelligence on this board I am surprised that we're still having a conversation about Rosberg being close to Hamilton because he won a title.
You realise why he won it? Consistency.
Why was he able to win it consistently? Because the car was a class above third, and all of those times that Rosberg was half a second off pole didn't matter as he was still faster than the 3rd place car.
Go around 4-6 tenths off of Hamilton now and you'll be 4th, 5th maybe.
Rosberg had a major cushion that guaranteed a second place because their competitors weren't close enough. Bottaa doesn't have that cushion and when he's made a small error it's been more notable.
Just to establish some facts.
- Rosberg won 9 times from 21 races.
- Hamilton won 10 times from 21 races.
- If Hamilton had not retired in Malaysia the total would have been 11-9 in Hamilton's favour.
- Rosberg finished in front of Hamilton 9 times when both finished.
- Hamilton finished in front of Rosberg 10 times when both finished.
- Again, with respect to Malaysia, the numbers would have been 11-9 in Hamilton's favour without that retirement.
- Rosberg had 1 less retirement than Hamilton.
If Hamilton had not retired in Malaysia, and everything else had remained the same, Rosberg would have lost the WDC by about 20 points or so. I think most Rosberg fanboys recognize that he needed that little bit of good fortune to win, but that is no insult. Hamilton only needed to DNF once more than Rosberg to lose the WDC. I.e. Hamilton's margin of superiority over Rosberg in 2016 amounted to 1 DNF. That's a very fine margin.
How often was Rosberg 5 tenths off Hamilton's pace in 2016? Practically never. To suggest it was the status quo is pure fiction. The actual difference between the two in qualifying, when assessing those races where both qualified unhindered, was less than 2 tenths in Hamilton's favour. Hamilton's biggest margin throughout the year was 0.543 seconds, in Austria, under changeable conditions. Rosberg was much closer to Hamilton than you are imagining.
Yes, Rosberg was consistent - as if this is some sort of insult. He was consistently fast, practically all the time. He never qualified lower than 2nd throughout the year, finished in front of his teammate often enough for reliability to play the deciding factor in the outcome of the championship, and made few mistakes throughout the year.
He was also subjected to intense media scrutiny. The majority English press were against him, Bernie Ecclestone himself declared he wanted Hamilton to win, and one can imagine members of his own team would have far rather had less competition to manage.
So yes, well spotted. He was consistent. Consistently excellent.