- 31 Jul 09, 14:55#138766
All these stats are calculated with the points system as it exists now, so many drivers have more points in this system than they actually scored.
A few issues I've encountered so far:
Disqualifications - It can be quite difficult for some of the older results to figure out whether a disqualification is a black flag (i.e. the driver's fault) or a technical problem. If it's technical (such as Martin Brundle's 1984 results) should these results be credited to the driver or ignored altogether? Is plank wear a driver error, etc?
Shared drives - There are lots and lots of these in the late 50s, but the problem is the shared drive often arose because the driver used two cars in a race. Should the best of these results be counted, or each count half, or what? There are even occasions where a driver got two podiums in the same race, which must have been interesting when the came to give out the trophies...
Collisions - Obviously not all these are the driver's fault, but who's to say the best drivers aren't better at not being in the wrong place at the wrong time?
Physical retirements - i.e. the driver was unwell. Does that count as an error?
Thresholds - in cricket records only count after a player has played in 10 test matches or more, so on that basis 295 drivers would count.
Accidents - I'm unclear as to whether an accident as recorded in the official results is defined as a driver error or whether accidents caused by mechanical failure count. And don't even get started on what kind of accident Senna suffered at Imola in 1994.
Mechanical failure percentage - is this an indication of a driver's luck or his skill in not overdriving the car?
Ultimately the biggest problem is that I can only go by the results recorded by the FIA at the time, and the way these results can be accessed on Forix.
A few issues I've encountered so far:
Disqualifications - It can be quite difficult for some of the older results to figure out whether a disqualification is a black flag (i.e. the driver's fault) or a technical problem. If it's technical (such as Martin Brundle's 1984 results) should these results be credited to the driver or ignored altogether? Is plank wear a driver error, etc?
Shared drives - There are lots and lots of these in the late 50s, but the problem is the shared drive often arose because the driver used two cars in a race. Should the best of these results be counted, or each count half, or what? There are even occasions where a driver got two podiums in the same race, which must have been interesting when the came to give out the trophies...
Collisions - Obviously not all these are the driver's fault, but who's to say the best drivers aren't better at not being in the wrong place at the wrong time?
Physical retirements - i.e. the driver was unwell. Does that count as an error?
Thresholds - in cricket records only count after a player has played in 10 test matches or more, so on that basis 295 drivers would count.
Accidents - I'm unclear as to whether an accident as recorded in the official results is defined as a driver error or whether accidents caused by mechanical failure count. And don't even get started on what kind of accident Senna suffered at Imola in 1994.
Mechanical failure percentage - is this an indication of a driver's luck or his skill in not overdriving the car?
Ultimately the biggest problem is that I can only go by the results recorded by the FIA at the time, and the way these results can be accessed on Forix.
Jim Clark, Monza, one lap down...