I thought this was a little interesting.
Mark Webber believes quality of Formula 1 grid is dropping
By Andrew van de Burgt and Sam Tremayne Monday, August 5th 2013, 10:19 GMT
Mark WebberMark Webber believes the quality of the Formula 1 grid has dropped since he made his debut in 2002 because of the prevalence of pay drivers.
The Australian believes financial concerns are forcing teams to focus on budget rather than talent, and that some of the most worthy drivers are being overlooked.
In what he labelled a 'sad state', Webber believes that has diluted the quality of the current grid to the extent it is actually weaker than it was 13 years ago when he made a home soil debut with Minardi.
"When I was on the grid at the back with Minardi you had Irvine, Salo - all those guys had been on podiums," Webber said.
"The grid was just packed full of guys who had won in F3000, won a lot of impressive races.
"[Now] there are a lot of talented guys out there, but a lot are slipping through the net unfortunately. That's a sad state.
"[Robin] Frijns for example is a phenomenal young talent, [but] has got no cash."
Webber said he remains focused on ensuring protege Mitch Evans reaches F1, but admitted he is wary of the 19-year-old being promoted too early.
Evans won last year's GP3 championship and has taken four podiums for Arden in his maiden GP2 campaign in 2013.
Asked about the example of Sergey Sirotkin, who is set to race for Sauber next year, Webber said entering the sport so young could present a safety concern.
"Maybe it's a safety worry, we'll see," Webber said of drivers being promoted so early.
"You can drive the car, but for sure it's not the optimal point to enter I don't think.
"My job is to get Mitch there to show what he can do, [but] there's not much testing going on at the moment [so] you have to see what they can do in the period they have.
"Is he [Sirotkin] a Kimi or Sebastian? We'll find out."
Australian GP starting grids -
comparing Webber's debut with his final home grand prix
Code: Select all2002 2013
1. Rubens Barrichello 1. Sebastian Vettel
2. Michael Schumacher 2. Mark Webber
3. Ralf Schumacher 3. Lewis Hamilton
4. David Coulthard 4. Felipe Massa
5. Kimi Raikkonen 5. Fernando Alonso
6. Juan Pablo Montoya 6. Nico Rosberg
7. Jarno Trulli 7. Kimi Raikkonen
8. Giancarlo Fisichella 8. Romain Grosjean
9. Felipe Massa 9. Paul di Resta
10. Nick Heidfeld 10. Jenson Button
11. Jenson Button 11. Nico Hulkenberg
12. Olivier Panis 12. Adrian Sutil
13. Jacques Villeneuve 13. Jean-Eric Vergne
14. Mika Salo 14. Daniel Ricciardo
15. Heinz-Harald Frentzen 15. Sergio Perez
16. Allan McNish 16. Valtteri Bottas
17. Enrique Bernoldi 17. Pastor Maldonado
18. Mark Webber 18. Esteban Gutierrez
19. Eddie Irvine 19. Jules Bianchi
20. Pedro de la Rosa 20. Max Chilton
21. Alex Yoong 21. Giedo van der Garde
22. Takuma Sato 22. Charles Pic
In 2002, all the rookies (barring McNish, who I can't find information for) finished in the top three of a significant feeder series the previous year. Oddly, Takuma Sato was the reigning British F3 champion. I wonder what happened there... Anyway. In 2013, we have (from the back of the grid onwards): Pic , van der Garde (6th in GP2 last year, 3rd in the two-event Asia series, previous top-three finish was Formula Renault 3.5 in 2008), Chilton (4th in GP2 last year, last top-three result was in T Cars back in 2006), Bianchi (didn't race in a full series last year, but has had numerous top-three finishes in the three years prior), Gutiérrez (3rd in GP2 last year, GP3 champion in 2010), Bottas (didn't race last year, 2011 GP3 champion).
So on the rookies, we have three with no real credentials, one who I don't think is ready (Gutiérrez), and two who are doing pretty well. The number of drivers with wins is the same (9 at the first race in each season), though there were more podiums (4 then, 1 now) and less points-finishers (2 had scored points at that point, as opposed to 6 today) however that's obviously skewed by the two extensions of the points system between 2002 and the present day.