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#228726
2010 Review - Best-performing drivers

Vettel Sebastian Vettel may have triumphed in a titanic battle for the world title itself - but championship table aside, who truly stood out on the track in 2010?

In Formula One, it is fair to say that the car counts for more than the driver so in assessing the best drivers of the season it is important to consider how each performed with the equipment they were given. With that taken into account, however, it is still hard to argue against the talents of the new world champion...

1. Sebastian Vettel

This year's title was Vettel's for the taking right from the start. The fact that he failed to win it - and in fact failed to even top the table - before the final race was mostly down to his fragile Red Bull machine rather than down to him, and although he did lose his cool and made some careless mistakes in the middle of the year, he certainly appeared to learn from them. What made him stand out from the rest, though, is that as the season came to a close, when the pressure was on, he really came into his own.

Vettel was exceptional in the closing stages and although he started the final five races of the season fifth in the championship, 24 points behind the leader, his team-mate Mark Webber, he never gave up. In Singapore, Fernando Alonso and Ferrari were ahead but he pushed the Spaniard hard and came home in second place. He then took three poles and won three times in the remaining four races, with faultless personal performances to steal the crown. Aside from the standout statistics, that performance alone proves he was the class of the field, bar none.

2. Fernando Alonso

Pre-season predicted Ferrari to be a title contender but it was Alonso, despite only just having joined the team, who had to keep things together in what turned out to be a chaotic start to the season. Despite winning the opening race, Ferrari fell apart - but Alonso kept his cool and, unlike his predecessor Kimi Raikkonen, continued to remain relatively upbeat and talk positively about turning things around in the future.

Importantly, too, Alonso quickly got a handle on his team-mate Felipe Massa and made the team his own. By the middle of the year, all the Ferrari effort was already firmly behind him and he only narrowly missed the title having virtually matched Vettel result for result. His typical approach of aiming for consistent podium finishes over out-and-out victories almost won him the title, with seven top-three finishes in the final 10 races - but in the end Vettel was consistently quicker.

3. Nico Rosberg

Nico Rosberg's chances of success in 2010 were quickly written off when it was announced Michael Schumacher would join him at Mercedes, especially when the team accepted the seven-times champion's request to switch race numbers, hinting at his effective number one status before the season began. But right from the off Rosberg, who joined the team with high praise from former employers Williams, refused to be intimidated.

In the first four races he out-qualified Schumacher and took two podium finishes while Schumacher had a best finish of sixth. Schumacher could have been forgiven for some comeback nerves, but it didn't stop there. By the end of the season, Rosberg qualified ahead of Schumacher 15 times in 19 races and beat him in all but three of the 15 races in which they both finished. But what was most astonishing was their relative points: Rosberg was just two shy of doubling Schumacher's score - a great performance and a real statement of his own success.

4. Robert Kubica

Although McLaren-Mercedes drivers Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton both had reasonable seasons, neither shone dramatically when compared against each other - indeed, Hamilton was far from dominating Button in the way many expected him to do this season while Button started well but then tailed off disappointingly. Instead, it is Robert Kubica who must take fourth spot in the top drivers list thanks to his consistent performances in helping Renault punch above their weight in 2010.

Kubica's consistency in qualifying was superb and had he not missed the cut in the final race of the season he would have been the only driver other than the two Red Bull men to compete in every top-10 shoot-out this year. He firmly out-performed his team-mate, 2009 GP2 runner-up Vitaly Petrov, in qualifying (17-2) and in the races that they both finished (12-0), and almost singlehandedly steered Renault to fifth place in the championship, scoring 136 of their 163 points and matching chief rival Nico Rosberg's tally of three podiums over the year.

http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/formula-1 ... mments-nav

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And you thought it was over :hehe:

Funny thing there is no Hamilton :hehe: , Webber... but I would put Kubica ahead of Rosberg.
#228836
I ask that this thread be kept on topic so it doesn't have to be locked like the two similar threads?

Anyway, my top five:

1. Nico Rosberg - Consistent and claimed podium finishes in a car that was the fourth or fifth fastest and comprehensively beat his seven time world champion teammate.
2. Robert Kubica - For the same reasons above, although he had a lesser team mate mate in Petrov, I can't really recall Kubica making a mistake!
3. Fernando Alonso - Made lots of mistakes and lost his way a bit in the first half of the season but was consistent and strong in the second half of the season.
4. Lewis Hamilton - Made silly mistakes in a few races and threw away a world championship lead, generally consistent when not crashing out!
5. Sebastian Vettel - Won the world drivers title by getting the job done when it counted although made too many mistakes and didn't convert many pole positions.
#228844
Well I really cant be bothered giving my views. Whats the point :(
#228845
I ask that this thread be kept on topic so it doesn't have to be locked like the two similar threads?

Anyway, my top five:

1. Nico Rosberg - Consistent and claimed podium finishes in a car that was the fourth or fifth fastest and comprehensively beat his seven time world champion teammate.
2. Robert Kubica - For the same reasons above, although he had a lesser team mate mate in Petrov, I can't really recall Kubica making a mistake!
3. Fernando Alonso - Made lots of mistakes and lost his way a bit in the first half of the season but was consistent and strong in the second half of the season.
4. Lewis Hamilton - Made silly mistakes in a few races and threw away a world championship lead, generally consistent when not crashing out!
5. Sebastian Vettel - Won the world drivers title by getting the job done when it counted although made too many mistakes and didn't convert many pole positions.


I agree with your top five and we're even on the same page as the reasons but my order would be moving Kubica down to fourth. The problems with him was simply under-qualifying, his performance was rock steady and even watching his practice sessions you could see his speed, but somehow he was always down a notch in final Q. Confidence perhaps? Coming to think about it, the ideal F1 driver for today's cars would be a mix of Vettel and Kubica.
#228866
... Coming to think about it, the ideal F1 driver for today's cars would be a mix of Vettel and Kubica.

Now you're talking! Vettel's raw pace with a sensible, racecraft-savvy head on his shoulders.
#228868
1. Kubica - The way he handled his Renault magnificently won me over the most. He drove it as if it was a mere extension of his body.

2. Webber - "Not bad for a number 2 driver." Says it all really, he was the underdog of the year with his ballsy driving and being there to maximise any advantage handed to him by Vettel's reliability gremlins/inability to overtake.

3. Hamilton - His maturity has improved a lot this year, the McLaren has been a tricky car to drive on occasions, but he remains as one of the most clinical overtakers.

4. Alonso - Team orders/sulking aside, he did very well to throw himself back into contention when all seemed lost at Silverstone. It's quite amusing listening to Andrea Stella his race engineer with the "Okay Fernando not listen carefully..." conversations. :P

5. Vettel - I have rated him down somewhat, he can still only win from pole (Interlagos doesn't count as winning from behind, Hülkenberg's FW32 isn't exactly the quickest car off the line) and he is still the worst overtaker in the field - unless he's lapping or it's a car that's a lot, lot slower. Also he had Marko and Christian on his side to make sure he got benefits at the expense of Webber.
#228987
There is no doubt that Kubica was very hungry for wins in 2010 and that's a good thing.
This year he was more determined and wanted those wins so badly.
I hope 2011 will be a more competitive year for him.
#229041
i think that the best ten are as follows

1.vettel
2.hamilton
3.webbber
4.alonso
5.button
6.kubica
7.rosberg
8.kobayashi
9. sutil
10.massa

i think that they were the best 10 drivers over the season :yes:
#229044
1. Kubica - The way he handled his Renault magnificently won me over the most. He drove it as if it was a mere extension of his body.

2. Webber - "Not bad for a number 2 driver." Says it all really, he was the underdog of the year with his ballsy driving and being there to maximise any advantage handed to him by Vettel's reliability gremlins/inability to overtake.

3. Hamilton - His maturity has improved a lot this year, the McLaren has been a tricky car to drive on occasions, but he remains as one of the most clinical overtakers.

4. Alonso - Team orders/sulking aside, he did very well to throw himself back into contention when all seemed lost at Silverstone. It's quite amusing listening to Andrea Stella his race engineer with the "Okay Fernando not listen carefully..." conversations. :P

5. Vettel - I have rated him down somewhat, he can still only win from pole (Interlagos doesn't count as winning from behind, Hülkenberg's FW32 isn't exactly the quickest car off the line) and he is still the worst overtaker in the field - unless he's lapping or it's a car that's a lot, lot slower. Also he had Marko and Christian on his side to make sure he got benefits at the expense of Webber.


Seb is worst overtaker in the field? Isnt that a bit harsh? Compared to the top 5, yes. Not the whole field.
#229070
For me it's just unbelievable how people rank Webber, just because they expected him to be s*** and he actually wasn't s***. Had the best car on the grid, more luck than Vettel and would've been nowhere if he had the same number of engine failures as Vettel. Is there even a question that the best ones were Vettel, Lewis and Alonso? nico and robert have to drive beside a well-known driver before qualifying in the same class, sorry but it's just the way it is
#229074
whats the point of this thread? we have an Alonso freak posting his poppy chicken and what are the rest of us meant to reply with?

Fact man <EDITED FOR CONTENT> below the belt line, DD.

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