F1000X wrote:Klon wrote:More than a year has passed, but it still feels like saying "Jenson Button - Formula 1 Driver's World Champion" is insulting to everyone who was this before him and everyone who will be this in the years to come. He's like the David Arquette of motorsport.
You better ask Nigel Mansell to hand back his 1992 championship then, because it was even more clear that season that he had a car that made him unbeatable.
The thing is, most of the current drivers in Formula 1 are that far apart in terms of ultimate pace over a race distance, and it seems to be the case that people remember far more distinctly Button's poor qualifying performance, but forget about how he would often finish a lot further up the grid.
There was a recent chart that I saw which showed how many points a particular driver would have won if he had finished where he qualified - where Button was one of the only drivers who finished significantly ahead of where he started (instead of 214 points, the total would have been about 140 points if he always finished where he started). Now, part of that is down to the misfortunes of others, don't get me wrong, but very few drivers managed the same feat (one of the few others was Rosberg, and even then by nowhere as significant a margin), so I would say that Button is by no means a bad driver. In terms out outright pace, only sometimes can be beat or match Vettel, Alonso or Hamilton, but on the other hand he has generally shown himself to be a pretty solid tactician, and capable of beating others by out thinking them on track.
Besides, in reality talent rarely makes up for a performance difference on track - if a driver has a superior car, and is at least quicker than his team mate, normally they can take the title fairly easily. By that same logic, the real winner this year was the RB6, because, if we are honest, Hamilton, Alonso or Button would probably have been capable of winning the title this year if they had been in that car (Webber is a bit of an unresolved case - perhaps if he had not had Vettel as a team mate, he could have taken the title). Schumacher himself has said, on several occasions, that his success was not down to him alone - once, Clarkson cheekily asked him "Was it really the car?", and Schumacher said "Yes - without a good car, and a good team, you can't win", and for several years, Ferrari did have the car to beat (especially in 2002 and 2004).
So, all this ranting about it being "just the car" is tiresome - yes, it is mostly about the car, because of the nature of the sport. It always has been, as even the great drivers have usually had massively superior cars all the way through the history of the sport, and almost always will be.