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#275544
DISCLAIMER:
Since I'm a bit of a numbers-nerd, I always like analyzing things and ask, "what if"? Although this topic might have been come and gone by now, I would still like to share this with you, before it becomes too long ago for anyone to care.

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The 2010 formula one season goes down into history as the season in which most the last race had most drivers still contending for the championship: Fernando Alonso, Mark Webber, Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton. An amazing season, and in a way reminiscent of the 2005 season in which Kimi Räikkönen was not only battling Alonso, but also the reliability of his own McLaren.

While Sebastian Vettel became the youngest world champion in Formula One history, some might feel that had another driver been in that fast Red Bull, it would not have been such a close fight, and the championship would have been over much earlier. A somewhat understandable point, but then you are forgetting the amount of points Vettel has lost out due to technical misfortune. To put things a little in perspective, here is what the championship would have looked if the five main championship contenders would not have had to deal with any misfortune; what do the driver’s performance results look like in 2010.

What counts as misfortune: mechanical failure, being crashed in to by another driver
What does not count as misfortune: wrong tactical choices, crashing their own car, penalty by the driver's own doing

Grand Prix of Bahrain
At the Grand Prix of Bahrain, Sebastian Vettel was on his way to certain victory until a badly functioning spark plug ruined his chances. Although he was still able to finish in fourth place, Fernando Alonso, Felipe Massa and Lewis Hamilton pushed him off the podium. Were it not for this bad luck, Vettel had would have certainly taken the first win of the season.

Standings 2010: Alonso 25pt, Hamilton 15pt, Vettel 12pt, Button 6pt, Webber 4pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 25pt, Alonso 18pt, Hamilton 12pt, Button 6pt, Webber 4pt

Grand Prix of Australia
During the Grand Prix of Australia, again Sebastian Vettel was in a comfortable lead when his car decided to do give up. When the torque dropped, and with that his brakes, the young German got stuck in the gravel pit and went home empty handed. Fernando Alonso also had his share of bad luck when he was spun in the first corner by the later race winner Jenson Button. In our alternative standings, Vettel would have won the race, and although Alonso would have probably not passed Button, he would have probably been able to stay ahead of Kubica and finish third.

Standings 2010: Alonso 37pt, Button 31pt, Hamilton 23pt, Vettel 12pt, Webber 6pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 50pt, Alonso 33pt, Button 24pt, Hamilton 20pt, Webber 6pt

Grand Prix of Malaysia
There was some bad luck in qualifying for some of the championship contenders in the Grand Prix of Malaysia, when tactical mistakes made by Hamilton, Alonso and Button left them at the back of the grid. The race was not without issues for Fernando Alonso. Although it was clear the Ferrari was not a front-runner this race, he had issues with his gearbox all race, and on top of that, his engine blew up two laps before the end. If he had not suffered these problems, a sixth place finish in front of Hamilton, Massa and Button could have been a realistic result. Although Mark Webber lost two seconds in his pitstop, it would not have made a difference and he would have still finished second behind Sebastian Vettel.

Standings 2010: Alonso 37pt, Vettel 37pt, Button 35pt, Hamilton 31pt, Webber 24pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 75pt, Alonso 41pt, Button 26pt, Hamilton 26pt, Webber 24pt

Grand Prix of China
The Grand Prix of China was very chaotic, but other than tactical mistakes, none of the championship contenders really had any bad luck in this race.

Standings 2010: Button 60pt, Alonso 49pt, Hamilton 49pt, Vettel 45pt, Webber 28pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 83pt, Alonso 53pt, Button 51pt, Hamilton 44pt, Webber 28pt

Grand Prix of Spain
At the Spanish Grand Prix, for a long time things went well for the championship contenders, until first Sebastian Vettel got problems with his brakes, which put him back behind Alonso, yet he did still finish third. Lewis Hamilton was not as fortunate though, as a flat tire in the last lap send him into the barriers. If Vettel and Hamilton did not have this bad luck, Webber would have won in front of Hamilton and Vettel, with Alonso on p4.

Standings 2010: Button 70pt, Alonso 67pt, Vettel 60pt, Webber 53pt, Hamilton 49pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 98pt, Alonso 65pt, Hamilton 62pt, Button 61pt, Webber 53pt

Grand Prix of Monaco
The Grand Prix of Monaco got off to a bad start for Fernando Alonso, who crashed his Ferrari in the third free practice session and because of that, had to miss out on qualifying; this was his own fault though. Jenson Button however was not to blame for an engineer that left something in his sidepot, killing the engine on the second lap. Although the reigning champion showed a slower pace this weekend than the Mercedes drivers, he should have been able to finish in 8th position.

Standings 2010: Webber 78pt, Vettel 78pt, Alonso 75pt, Button 70pt, Hamilton 59pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 116pt, Webber 78pt, Alonso 73pt, Hamilton 71pt, Button 65pt

Grand Prix of Turkey
The Grand Prix of Turkey was highlighted by the crash of Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber. In the end, it was the young German's mistake that cost both drivers points. For the alternative championship standings, Mark Webber is given the victory, where Vettel is responsible for his own loss in points.

Standings 2010: Webber 93pt, Button 88pt, Hamilton 84pt, Alonso 79pt, Vettel 78pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 116pt, Webber 103pt, Hamilton 90pt, Button 80pt, Alonso 77pt

Grand Prix of Canada
The Grand Prix of Canada started with bad luck for Mark Webber, who received a 5 grid penalty because his gearbox was changed, starting him from P7. Although team mate Vettel also had problems with his gearbox, the Red Bull's pace was not such that they lost out on a certain podium finish.

Standings 2010: Hamilton 109pt, Button 106pt, Webber 103pt, Alonso 94pt, Vettel 90pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 128pt, Hamilton 115pt, Webber 113pt, Button 98pt, Alonso 92pt

Grand Prix of Europe
The European Grand Prix in Valencia was known for two things: first, the spectacular crash of Mark Webber, which was his own mistake and thus doesn't count in the context of this article. Then there was the controversy with Lewis Hamilton, who passed the safety car, and Fernando Alonso, who did not. Although it is hard to say exactly how much time Hamilton would not have gained if the stewards did not wait 20 minutes before they penalized him, he was still very fast in the final laps of the race. He would have probably finished in third position behind Button, but still in front of the chasing pack lead by Barrichello.

Standings 2010: Hamilton 127pt, Button 121pt, Vettel 115pt, Webber 103pt, Alonso 98pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 153pt, Hamilton 130pt, Button 116pt, Webber 113pt, Alonso 96pt

Grand Prix of England
At the British Grand Prix, two championship contenders were faced with bad luck, which they themselves were partially responsible for. Sebastian Vettel had a flat tire, but this was because of contact with Hamilton. The bad timing of Alonso's penalty behind the safety car could also have been prevented if the Spaniard had not caused the penalty in the first place. So for the alternative standings, the Grand Prix of England changes nothing.

Standings 2010: Hamilton 145pt, Button 133pt, Webber 128pt, Vettel 121pt, Alonso 98pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 159pt, Hamilton 148pt, Webber 138pt, Button 128pt, Alonso 96pt

Grand Prix of Germany
In the context of this article, placing the German Grand Prix is a difficult one, since it is debatable how much 'bad luck' the Ferrari team order would constitute. However, like we did with Lewis Hamilton in the European Grand Prix, we'll put Alonso back to second place in the alternative standings. Although Mark Webber had an oil pick-up problem later in the race, he would have probably not passed the McLarens.

Standings 2010: Hamilton 157pt, Button 143pt, Webber 136pt, Vettel 136pt, Alonso 123pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 174pt, Hamilton 160pt, Webber 146pt, Button 138pt, Alonso 114pt

Grand Prix of Hungary
Another tricky situation, when Sebastian Vettel saw a certain victory at the Hungarian Grand Prix slip through his fingers after his team failed to inform him about the safety car. As it was avoidable however, this won't change the alternative standings, and Vettel will stay third. Someone who did see bad luck, was Lewis Hamilton, whose gearbox failed, losing him a fourth place finish and 12 points.

Standings 2010: Webber 161pt, Hamilton 157pt, Vettel 151pt, Button 147pt, Alonso 141pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 189pt, Hamilton 172pt, Webber 171pt, Button 142pt, Alonso 132pt

Grand Prix of Belgium
The Grand Prix in the Belgian Ardennes was a disastrous race for Sebastian Vettel, but also for Jenson Button, whose race was ended when Vettel tried to overtake him. Although Vettel is to blame for this, Button lost out on a fairly certain second position because of the incident. Alonso's slip-up later in the race was his own mistake.

Standings 2010: Hamilton 182pt, Webber 179pt, Vettel 151pt, Button 147pt, Alonso 141pt
Alternative standings: Hamilton 195pt, Vettel 189pt, Webber 186pt, Button 160pt, Alonso 132pt

Grand Prix of Italy
Although it was Hamilton's own fault for crashing out in the first lap of the Italian Grand Prix, this time it was Sebastian Vettel who was the victim of bad luck when his engine seemingly died. Luckily for him, the Renault engine came back to life and he ended up taking fourth place. Even without this mechanical issue, it was unlikely that he would have caught up with the much faster Ferrari of Massa, so in the end, nothing changes in this race.

Standings 2010: Webber 187pt, Hamilton 182pt, Alonso 166pt, Button 165pt, Vettel 163pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 201pt, Hamilton 199pt, Webber 194pt, Button 178pt, Alonso 157pt

Grand Prix of Singapore
The crash between Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton was a race incident, which could be considered either's fault. As such, it will be negated and will not affect the alternative outcome.

Standings 2010: Webber 202pt, Alonso 191pt, Hamilton 182pt, Vettel 181pt, Button 177pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 219pt, Webber 209pt, Hamilton 199pt, Button 190pt, Alonso 182pt

Grand Prix of Japan
As a result of the crash with Webber in Singapore, Lewis Hamilton had to change his gearbox in Suzuka, which cost him 5 positions on the starting grid. Later in the race, the new gearbox also acted up, because of which he finished only in fifth position. Although Lewis was not faster than the Red Bulls, without these issues he would have easily taken third place from Alonso, which would have set Button back to fifth.

Standings 2010: Webber 220pt, Alonso 206pt, Vettel 206pt, Hamilton 192pt, Button 189pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 244pt, Webber 227pt, Hamilton 214pt, Button 200pt, Alonso 194pt

Grand Prix of Korea
The first Grand Prix of Korea was driven under poor weather circumstances, which would eventually cost Mark Webber his race by his own mistake. Actual bad luck was experienced by Sebastian Vettel however, who saw a certain victory go up in smoke when his engine died, giving valuable extra points to Alonso and Hamilton.

Standings 2010: Alonso 231pt, Webber 220pt, Hamilton 210pt, Vettel 206pt, Button 189pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 269pt, Hamilton 229pt, Webber 227pt, Alonso 212pt, Button 210pt

Grand Prix of Brazil
The Grand Prix of Brazil went by without too many issues for the championship contenders, aside from Jenson Button who -by his own doing- failed to qualify in the top 10.

Standings 2010: Alonso 246pt, Webber 238pt, Vettel 231pt, Hamilton 222pt, Button 199pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 294pt, Webber 245pt, Hamilton 239pt, Alonso 227pt, Button 222pt

Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi
Apart from the strategical errors of Mark Webber and Fernando Alonso, and the 'bad luck' they had in returning to the track behind Nico Rosberg and Vitaly Petrov, in the context of this article nothing changes after Abu Dhabi.

Standings 2010: Vettel 256pt, Alonso 252pt, Webber 242pt, Hamilton 240pt, Button 214pt
Alternative standings: Vettel 319pt, Hamilton 257pt, Webber 249pt, Button 237pt, Alonso 233pt

In conclusion I
* Sebastian Vettel lost a net 63 points due to mechanical failures and other misfortune.
* Jenson Button lost a net 23 points due to mechanical failures and other misfortune.
* Lewis Hamilton lost a net 17 points due to mechanical failures and other misfortune.
* Mark Webber lost a net 7 points due to mechanical failures and other misfortune.
* Fernando Alonso gained a net 19 points due to mechanical failures and other misfortune from his direct championship competitors.

In conclusion II
Were it not for mechanical failures or other cases of bad luck...
* ...Sebastian Vettel would have secured the championship after the Grand Prix of Brasil, after which his 49 point lead would have been too big for Mark Webber to make up.
* ...rather than finishing just 4 points in front of the number two (Fernando Alonso), Vettel would have ended the season with a 62 point lead on Lewis Hamilton.
* ...rather than finishing just 14 points in front of his team mate, Vettel would have ended the season with a 70 point lead on Mark Webber.
* ...rather than leading the championship in the middle of the season, Webber would have never been closer than 3 points behind Vettel at any point during the season.
* ...rather than finishing just fifth in the championship, 26 points behind his team mate and 38 points behind Alonso, Buttno would have ended the season as fourth; still 20 points behind Hamilton, but 4 points ahead of Alonso.
* ...Fernando Alonso would have never lead the championship, and would have trailed Vettel, Hamilton, Webber and Button for most of the season. He would have finished the season as fifth, 86 points behind Vettel.
Last edited by mnmracer on 24 Sep 11, 01:12, edited 2 times in total.
#275551
Thanks for that mnmracer! An interesting read. :)

Of course this is all speculation at the end of the day, and what happened happened, but it really is an eye opener when you look at who lost what and where.

Good stuff. :thumbup:
#275600
Hi mate, while I am happy to see some written proof of how Seb was a worthy champion last year, I still disagree with something in there that is conflicting:

[color=#00BFFF]DISCLAIMER:


Grand Prix of Hungary
Another tricky situation, when Sebastian Vettel saw a certain victory at the Hungarian Grand Prix slip through his fingers after his team failed to inform him about the safety car. As it was avoidable however, this won't change the alternative standings, and Vettel will stay third. Someone who did see bad luck, was Lewis Hamilton, whose gearbox failed, losing him a fourth place finish.



Grand Prix of Singapore
The crash between Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton was a race incident, which could be considered bad luck. If we agree on that (if you don't, just recalculate the standings yourself), it would have been likely that Hamilton would have passed Webber again on his fresher tires, so for the case of this article, we're giving Hamilton P3 and Webber P4.



The issue in Hungary was a technical failure. Vettel's radio wasn't working. It probably could have been avoidable you're right - but he might have been setting up something on his steering wheel.

Singing the same tune as Turkey, Silverstone and Hungary - the Webber/Hamilton incident was avoidable. They're probably both at fault so neither should have scored points.

Also not sure if it has really been established whether Vettel was at fault in Silverstone?

So if you give Vettel at least second in Hungary and give Webber and Hamilton DNF's for Singapore - Vettel's lead would have been even more! :thumbup::clap::cloud9:
#275620
Hi mate, while I am happy to see some written proof of how Seb was a worthy champion last year, I still disagree with something in there that is conflicting:

The issue in Hungary was a technical failure. Vettel's radio wasn't working. It probably could have been avoidable you're right - but he might have been setting up something on his steering wheel.

Singing the same tune as Turkey, Silverstone and Hungary - the Webber/Hamilton incident was avoidable. They're probably both at fault so neither should have scored points.

Also not sure if it has really been established whether Vettel was at fault in Silverstone?

So if you give Vettel at least second in Hungary and give Webber and Hamilton DNF's for Singapore - Vettel's lead would have been even more! :thumbup::clap::cloud9:


My apologies, I see I forgot to fix the inconsistency you mentioned regarding Singapore; racing incident with equal blame should negate any alterations.

Well, I know that everything can and always will be debatable, so I was trying to come up with the most agreeable consensus.
Turkey: it's generally agreed upon that it was mostly Vettel's fault.
Silverstone: same as with Singapore, a racing incident with equal blame.
Hungary: could have been avoided by Vettel paying more attention, although I don't think it's his fault perse, if you want a clinical analysis, that's the best way to go.

However, if you want to go by the Hungary was technical issue-theory, I think it's fair to say that Vettel would have (easily) won Hungary if it wasn't for the penalty, so than the standing would be:
Vettel 329pt, Hamilton 256pt, Webber 247pt, Button 227pt, Alonso 222pt
#275634
Come on mnmracer, why not get your teeth stuck into a few more seasons. How about you rewrite history and luck and make Lewis the real winner in '07, Fisi the win from '06, Kimi '05 & '03 & Jenson '04. I'm sure with your creativity you can even get JPM over the line in '02. How about we make DC a double WDC from '00 and '01. :)
#275639
Come on mnmracer, why not get your teeth stuck into a few more seasons. How about you rewrite history and luck and make Lewis the real winner in '07, Fisi the win from '06, Kimi '05 & '03 & Jenson '04. I'm sure with your creativity you can even get JPM over the line in '02. How about we make DC a double WDC from '00 and '01. :)


If you've got some serious requests, I might look into it, but when you include Jenson 04 and Fisi 06... I'll just say :drink::wink:

Though Kimi '03 and '05 might be interesting, the reason I took on this one is because, because with Kimi most everyone agreed he should have won '05 and everyone knows he had loads of bad luck. With 2010, everyone just looks at it and says "wow, Vettel really performed poorly considering the car's speed", because they don't realize how much bad luck he had.
#275640
Come on mnmracer, why not get your teeth stuck into a few more seasons. How about you rewrite history and luck and make Lewis the real winner in '07, Fisi the win from '06, Kimi '05 & '03 & Jenson '04. I'm sure with your creativity you can even get JPM over the line in '02. How about we make DC a double WDC from '00 and '01. :)


I think 08 would be an epic one, with Crash-gate and all. Was Massa the worthy champion? Or Lewis? Can you please do one on 08? :cloud9: Also account for Timo Glock's tire? Or not?
#275645
Again you can't just change results from race 1 and expect the following results to continue on the same time path.

Easy way to explain it is go watch the back to the future trilogy :hehe: , if you go back and change something in the past, everything that follows would also change.
#275774
Come on mnmracer, why not get your teeth stuck into a few more seasons. How about you rewrite history and luck and make Lewis the real winner in '07, Fisi the win from '06, Kimi '05 & '03 & Jenson '04. I'm sure with your creativity you can even get JPM over the line in '02. How about we make DC a double WDC from '00 and '01. :)


I think 08 would be an epic one, with Crash-gate and all. Was Massa the worthy champion? Or Lewis? Can you please do one on 08? :cloud9: Also account for Timo Glock's tire? Or not?


That was a crushing race. You could see massa dad fa-reaking out about him winning, and then the way massa looked on the podium. And while they were all on camera the ferrari team was like no no no, waving at them, they didn't win!! And of course the BS that followed when people were booing lewis.
#275794
And of course the BS that followed when people were booing lewis.


Well they were in Brazil.

I think there was a Brazilian GP years ago where Senna retired and a hug chunk of the crowd left!


That would never happen at Silverstone. No booing, no departing... the British fans just love the F1 experience as well as cheering for the racer/team they support.
#275799
And of course the BS that followed when people were booing lewis.


Well they were in Brazil.

I think there was a Brazilian GP years ago where Senna retired and a hug chunk of the crowd left!


That would never happen at Silverstone. No booing, no departing... the British fans just love the F1 experience as well as cheering for the racer/team they support.


This is what I was getting at more than anything. I have never boo'd a sporting event. Never. Hell even high school football we had better manners than that. :confused:
#275801
And of course the BS that followed when people were booing lewis.


Well they were in Brazil.

I think there was a Brazilian GP years ago where Senna retired and a hug chunk of the crowd left!


That would never happen at Silverstone. No booing, no departing... the British fans just love the F1 experience as well as cheering for the racer/team they support.


This is what I was getting at more than anything. I have never boo'd a sporting event. Never. Hell even high school football we had better manners than that. :confused:


The worst I've is is utter a few fruity words but booing is bang out of order. I can't stand poor losers just as much as bad winners.
#275805
And of course the BS that followed when people were booing lewis.


Well they were in Brazil.

I think there was a Brazilian GP years ago where Senna retired and a hug chunk of the crowd left!


That would never happen at Silverstone. No booing, no departing... the British fans just love the F1 experience as well as cheering for the racer/team they support.


This is what I was getting at more than anything. I have never boo'd a sporting event. Never. Hell even high school football we had better manners than that. :confused:


The worst I've is is utter a few fruity words but booing is bang out of order. I can't stand poor losers just as much as bad winners.


Unfortunately, that's exactly what we saw at Interlagos in '08 and Monza this year. :irked:

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