- 10 Nov 10, 14:02#224306
An F1 print magazine I subscribe to had a brief bit about a British doctor of physics who studied statistical patterns in the last 40 years of WDC scoring. From that, he compiled this formula to predict the mathematical likelihood of any particular driver prevailing in WDC. Here's what he came up with:
X = (11*((√p) ÷ r)) +10w + 5s + (5f ÷ 2) - 20a
Where:
p= number of poles
r= number of retirements
w= number of wins
s= number of second or third place finishes
f= number of points scoring finishes lower than 3rd
a= average race finish
The logic is really quite interesting, less for what counts in a driver's favour than what is counted against him. The first clause penalises heavily for more than one DNF (not sure what he expects to happen if a driver has no DNFs as division by 0 is meaningless). The fourth clause provides a healthy penalty for finishing out of the points. And the final clause exacts a heavy toll for not coming first every race.
The way I calculate it, Webber has the best score. Which means he should win (provided Webber will let him
).
LH goes into Abu Dhabi with a negative score. In terms of statistical probability, I reckon that means he stands no chance in hell.
X = (11*((√p) ÷ r)) +10w + 5s + (5f ÷ 2) - 20a
Where:
p= number of poles
r= number of retirements
w= number of wins
s= number of second or third place finishes
f= number of points scoring finishes lower than 3rd
a= average race finish
The logic is really quite interesting, less for what counts in a driver's favour than what is counted against him. The first clause penalises heavily for more than one DNF (not sure what he expects to happen if a driver has no DNFs as division by 0 is meaningless). The fourth clause provides a healthy penalty for finishing out of the points. And the final clause exacts a heavy toll for not coming first every race.
The way I calculate it, Webber has the best score. Which means he should win (provided Webber will let him

LH goes into Abu Dhabi with a negative score. In terms of statistical probability, I reckon that means he stands no chance in hell.
"I'll bet ya a hundred and five thousand dollars you go to sleep before I do."
--Dobbsie
--Dobbsie