No Ferrari Alternative Championship
No Ferrari Alternative Championship
I've finally jumped on the "alternate championship" bandwagon...
I'll post the results for 1950 and 1951...
1950
Best four results counted
Giuseppe Farina 37pts (3 wins, 4th)
Juan Manuel Fangio 31pts (3 wins)
Luigi Fagioli 24pts (5 2nds)
Louis Rosier 11pts (2 3rds, 4th, 5th, 5th-shared drive)
Johnnie Parsons 10pts (1 win)
Prince Bira 7pts (3rd, 4th)
Louis Chiron 6pts (2nd)
Bill Holland 6pts (2nd)
Phillippe Etancelin 4.5 pts (4th, 4th - shared drive)
Reg Parnell 4pts (3rd)
Mauri Rose 4pts (3rd)
Robert Manzon 4pts (3rd)
Yves Giraud-Cabantous 3pts (4th)
Bob Gerard 3pts (4th)
Cecil Green 3pts (4th)
Johnny Claes 2pts (5th)
Felice Bonetto 2pts (5th)
Pierre Levegh 2pts (5th)
toulo de Graffenried 2pts (5th)
Eugene Chaboud 1.5 pts (4th - shared drive)
Charles Pozzi 1pt (5th - shared drive)
Joie Chitwood 1pt (5th-shared drive)
Tony Bettenhausen 1pt (5th-shared drive)
1951
Best Four results count
Juan Manuel Fangio 32pts (3 1sts, 1st-shared drive)
Nino Farina 20pts (1st, 1st-shared drive 2nd)
Louis Rosier 14pts (2nd, 2 3rds)
Felice Bonetto 10pts (1st-shared drive, 2nd)
Lee Wallard 9pts (1st)
Yves Giraud Cabantous 10pts (3rd, 2 4ths)
Nino Farina 6pts (2nd)
Mike Nazaruk 6pts (2nd)
Robert Manzon 6pts (2nd)
Louis Chiron 6pts (3rd, 5th)
Andre Simon 6pts (2nd)
Consalvo Sanesi 4pts (3rd)
Reg Parnell 4pts (3rd)
Pierre Levegh 4pts (3rd)
Luigi Fagioli 4pts (1st-shared drive)
Johnny Claes 4pts (2 5ths)
Toulo de Graffenried 3pts (4th)
Andy Linden 3pts (4th)
Andre Pilette 3pts (4th)
Consalvo Sanesi 3pts (4th)
Jacques Swaters 3pts (4th)
Bobby Ball 2pts (5th)
Eugene Chaboud 2pts (5th)
Peter Walker 2pts (5th)
Franco Rol 2pts (5th)
Jack McGrath 2pts (3rd-shared drive)
Manny Ayulo 2pts (3rd-shared drive)
I promise to do a cleaner table for 1952...
EDIT: I'll give very quick reports on 1950 and 1951, but from what I see... Farina had an easier time winning 1950, and Fangio manhandled everyone in 1951. Felice Bonetto wins even though he shared the drive with Juan Manuel Fangio, Yves Giraud Cabantous and Louis Rosier impresses, and Johnny Claes unrejectifies himself! No, I'm not going to sift through every single person on the list and see if they've gotten unrejectified in real life, and see if I've unrejectified them, and so on.
I'll post the results for 1950 and 1951...
1950
Best four results counted
Giuseppe Farina 37pts (3 wins, 4th)
Juan Manuel Fangio 31pts (3 wins)
Luigi Fagioli 24pts (5 2nds)
Louis Rosier 11pts (2 3rds, 4th, 5th, 5th-shared drive)
Johnnie Parsons 10pts (1 win)
Prince Bira 7pts (3rd, 4th)
Louis Chiron 6pts (2nd)
Bill Holland 6pts (2nd)
Phillippe Etancelin 4.5 pts (4th, 4th - shared drive)
Reg Parnell 4pts (3rd)
Mauri Rose 4pts (3rd)
Robert Manzon 4pts (3rd)
Yves Giraud-Cabantous 3pts (4th)
Bob Gerard 3pts (4th)
Cecil Green 3pts (4th)
Johnny Claes 2pts (5th)
Felice Bonetto 2pts (5th)
Pierre Levegh 2pts (5th)
toulo de Graffenried 2pts (5th)
Eugene Chaboud 1.5 pts (4th - shared drive)
Charles Pozzi 1pt (5th - shared drive)
Joie Chitwood 1pt (5th-shared drive)
Tony Bettenhausen 1pt (5th-shared drive)
1951
Best Four results count
Juan Manuel Fangio 32pts (3 1sts, 1st-shared drive)
Nino Farina 20pts (1st, 1st-shared drive 2nd)
Louis Rosier 14pts (2nd, 2 3rds)
Felice Bonetto 10pts (1st-shared drive, 2nd)
Lee Wallard 9pts (1st)
Yves Giraud Cabantous 10pts (3rd, 2 4ths)
Nino Farina 6pts (2nd)
Mike Nazaruk 6pts (2nd)
Robert Manzon 6pts (2nd)
Louis Chiron 6pts (3rd, 5th)
Andre Simon 6pts (2nd)
Consalvo Sanesi 4pts (3rd)
Reg Parnell 4pts (3rd)
Pierre Levegh 4pts (3rd)
Luigi Fagioli 4pts (1st-shared drive)
Johnny Claes 4pts (2 5ths)
Toulo de Graffenried 3pts (4th)
Andy Linden 3pts (4th)
Andre Pilette 3pts (4th)
Consalvo Sanesi 3pts (4th)
Jacques Swaters 3pts (4th)
Bobby Ball 2pts (5th)
Eugene Chaboud 2pts (5th)
Peter Walker 2pts (5th)
Franco Rol 2pts (5th)
Jack McGrath 2pts (3rd-shared drive)
Manny Ayulo 2pts (3rd-shared drive)
I promise to do a cleaner table for 1952...
EDIT: I'll give very quick reports on 1950 and 1951, but from what I see... Farina had an easier time winning 1950, and Fangio manhandled everyone in 1951. Felice Bonetto wins even though he shared the drive with Juan Manuel Fangio, Yves Giraud Cabantous and Louis Rosier impresses, and Johnny Claes unrejectifies himself! No, I'm not going to sift through every single person on the list and see if they've gotten unrejectified in real life, and see if I've unrejectified them, and so on.
Last edited by Aerospeed on 28 Dec 2010, 01:25, edited 1 time in total.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
I predict a clean 198o
- FullMetalJack
- Site Donor
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Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
I can see Button smashing 2004.
I like the way Snrub thinks!
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Some years in this will be radically different, others will hardly change at all! The Schumacher years will be the most interesting I feel. Also years where the championship was very close between two or more non-Ferrari drivers (such as 1981, 1983, 1986, 1994, 1996) someone may benefit more from Ferraris' absence than someone else.
Webber or Hamilton could steal this year too if they benefit more from no Alonso/Massa than Vettel does!
Webber or Hamilton could steal this year too if they benefit more from no Alonso/Massa than Vettel does!
"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
I think you could save some efforts and skip 1980, 1992 or 1993...
Tread lightly in ARWS. Every decision might be your last.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
What about cars with Ferrari engines? Sauber and Toro Rosso this year for example?
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Aerond wrote:I think you could save some efforts and skip 1980, 1992 or 1993...
Or 1973

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
It's up to Jeremy to decide, but I personally think Ferrari-engined other cars should stay in, it would seem a shame to be eliminating Minardi, Dallara, Sauber etc when it's those sort of teams we all want to see benefitted! 

"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
James1978 wrote:It's up to Jeremy to decide, but I personally think Ferrari-engined other cars should stay in, it would seem a shame to be eliminating Minardi, Dallara, Sauber etc when it's those sort of teams we all want to see benefitted!
Who said I wanted to see Sauber benefitted in any way?

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Phoenix wrote:James1978 wrote:It's up to Jeremy to decide, but I personally think Ferrari-engined other cars should stay in, it would seem a shame to be eliminating Minardi, Dallara, Sauber etc when it's those sort of teams we all want to see benefitted!
Who said I wanted to see Sauber benefitted in any way?
You really want Kobayashi eliminated from this year?


"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Ferrari MAKE engines stay. I'm not going around seeing "what if" on all seasons with Ferrari engines. And there's the rebadging of the engines in some cases (eg. The Ferrari rebranding for Sauber's engines being Petronas), which can make it really confusing. For now, let's say Ferrari was just an engine supplier just like Mercedes for a good chunk of the 1990's and the entirety of the 2000's.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1952
Best four results counted, with one point for fastest lap
It was a very close season indeed, as not very many people had many points finishes period! With the season tied up going into the finale, and the even though neither Hawthorn or Manzon finished in the points, Manzon was declared winner in the final race's results as he had placed 8th, 9 laps down, and Hawthorn retiring on Lap 38. With his retirement, according to tie-breaker laws in F1, the one with the most 1sts, then 2nds, 3rds, 4ths, etc. wins the dead heat battle. Since Hawthorn only finished in the points, whilst Manzon finished four times (compared to Hawthorn's three), Manzon won the championship.
Also note that the fastest lap was only counted for two races, being the Indy 500 and the Italian GP. I couldn't find a place where to find the fastest laps chart, so I simply didn't count it for that year, since Ferrari got the fastest laps for every other race.
Best four results counted, with one point for fastest lap
Code: Select all
Driver Country Points Earnings (in order) Total Points
Robert Manzon France 88 6 22
Mike Hawthorn Britain 6 8 8 22
Jean Behra France 8 3 8 19
Maurice Trintignant France 6 4 10
Jose Froilan Gonzalez Argentina 9 9
Ken Wharton Britain 6 3 9
Troy Ruttman United States 8 8
Jim Rathmann United States 6 6
Dennis Poore Britain 6 6
Fritz Riess Germany 6 6
Felice Bonetto Italy 6 6
Alan Brown Britain 4 4
Sam Hanks United States 4 4
Paul Frere Belgium 4 4
Peter Collins Britain 4 4
Eric Thompson Britain 4 4
Toni Ulmen Germany 4 4
Chico Landi Brazil 4 4
Johnny Claes Belgium 2 2 4
Toulo de Graffenried Switzerland 3 3
Duane Carter United States 3 3
Alan Brown Belgium 3 3
Reg Parnell Britain 3 3
Helmut Niedermayr Germany 3 3
Duncan Hamilton Britain 3 3
Eric Brandon Britain 2 2
Art Cross United States 2 2
Phillippe Etancelin France 2 2
Ken Downing Britain 2 2
Lance Macklin Britain 2 2
Eitel Cantoni Uruguay 2 2
Bill Vukovich United States 1 1
It was a very close season indeed, as not very many people had many points finishes period! With the season tied up going into the finale, and the even though neither Hawthorn or Manzon finished in the points, Manzon was declared winner in the final race's results as he had placed 8th, 9 laps down, and Hawthorn retiring on Lap 38. With his retirement, according to tie-breaker laws in F1, the one with the most 1sts, then 2nds, 3rds, 4ths, etc. wins the dead heat battle. Since Hawthorn only finished in the points, whilst Manzon finished four times (compared to Hawthorn's three), Manzon won the championship.
Also note that the fastest lap was only counted for two races, being the Indy 500 and the Italian GP. I couldn't find a place where to find the fastest laps chart, so I simply didn't count it for that year, since Ferrari got the fastest laps for every other race.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
James1978 wrote:Phoenix wrote:James1978 wrote:It's up to Jeremy to decide, but I personally think Ferrari-engined other cars should stay in, it would seem a shame to be eliminating Minardi, Dallara, Sauber etc when it's those sort of teams we all want to see benefitted!
Who said I wanted to see Sauber benefitted in any way?
You really want Kobayashi eliminated from this year?![]()
Tricky one. I don't want to see Kamui Kobayashi eliminated, but I hate Sauber. And Toro Rosso too.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1953
Top Four Results counted. I could only find the fastest laps for Indy 500, Belgium, France, Britain and Italy. Points system 8-6-4-3-2.
Star (*) indicates shared drive.
The championship was very close coming into the finale at Italy (he was leading Gonzalez by four points) but Gonzalez failed to score, and the championship was Fangio's once again. However, he put up an impressive comback; Gonzalez took the outright lead at the gates, but Fangio won five times in the same number of races (however, the second to last was shared with Felice Bonetto), and it was the first case (not sure about this) that there was someone needing to have a scoring position exempt from the standings. This is Fangio's second championship, so say hurrah to him!
Top Four Results counted. I could only find the fastest laps for Indy 500, Belgium, France, Britain and Italy. Points system 8-6-4-3-2.
Star (*) indicates shared drive.
Code: Select all
Driver Name Country Points places (in order) Total Points
Juan Manuel Fangio Argentina 9 8 8 4* 9 34 (38)
Jose Froilan Gonzalez Argentina 8 4* 6 7 25
Toulo de Graffenried Switzerland 6 6 4 4 20
Felice Bonetto Italy 4* 4 6 4* 18
Maurice Trintignant France 1.5* 4 4 6 15.5
Onofre Marimon Argentina 8 3 11
Bill Vukovich United States 9 9
Oscar Alfredo Galvez Argentina 6 6
Art Cross United States 6 6
Hermann Lang Germany 6 6
Jean Behra France 4 2 6
Stirling Moss Britain 2 3 5
Ken Wharton Britain 2 3 5
Roberto Mieres Argentina 4 4
Harry Schell United States 1.5* 2 3.5
Peter Collins Britain 3 3
Harry Schell United States 3 3
Prince Bira(?) Thailand 3 3
John Barber Britain 2 2
Jack McGrath United States 2 2
Sam Hanks United States 2 2
Duane Carter United States 2 2
Fred Wacker United States 2 2
Hans Herrmann Germany 2 2
Albert Scherrer Switzerland 2 2
Sergio Mantovani Italy 2* 2
Luigi Musso Italy 2* 2
Fred Agabashian United States 1.5* 1.5
Paul Russo United States 1.5* 1.5
The championship was very close coming into the finale at Italy (he was leading Gonzalez by four points) but Gonzalez failed to score, and the championship was Fangio's once again. However, he put up an impressive comback; Gonzalez took the outright lead at the gates, but Fangio won five times in the same number of races (however, the second to last was shared with Felice Bonetto), and it was the first case (not sure about this) that there was someone needing to have a scoring position exempt from the standings. This is Fangio's second championship, so say hurrah to him!
- FullMetalJack
- Site Donor
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Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
2003 should be interesting between Kimi and JPM and I looked to find out in 1988, Arrows get a 1-2 finish.





I like the way Snrub thinks!
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
For obvious reasons I decided to say "f-all" to the fastest laps for a point rule.
1954
Top five results count. Star indicated shared drive. One star means a shared drive, two stars mean two shared drives in a race.
A walkover. Booooring....
Fangio would have had a perfect score, but I think Fangio assumed he would win the championship anyways. What a honorable person.
1955
Top five results count
Looks like a walkover, but Moss had a good shot of winning the championship. The only problem was that his engine went.
1954
Top five results count. Star indicated shared drive. One star means a shared drive, two stars mean two shared drives in a race.

Code: Select all
Driver Team Country Points results (in order) Total Points
Juan Manuel Fangio Maserati/Mercedes Argentina 8 8 8 6 8 8 8 6 40 (58)
Karl Kling Mercedes Germany 6 3 6 3 18
Hans Herrmann Mercedes Germany 6 6 12
Roberto Mieres Maserati Argentina 4 4 4 12
Prince Bira Maserati Thailand 3 3 4 10
Sergio Mantovani Maserati Italy 2 4 3 9
Bill Vukovich Kurtis Kraft United States 8 8
Onofre Marimon Maserati Argentina 8 8
Luigi Musso Maserati Italy 8 8
Harry Schell Maserati United States 4 3 7
Elie Bayol Gordini France 6 6
Jimmy Bryan Kurtis Kraft United States 6 6
Stirling Moss Maserati Britain 6 6
Jack McGrath Kurtis Kraft United States 4 4
Andre Pilette Gordini Belgium 4 4
Fred Wacker Gordini United States 4 4
Jean Behra Gordini France 2 2 4
Ken Wharton Maserati Britain 2 2 4
Luigi Villoresi Maserati Italy 3 3
Peter Collins Vanwall Britain 3 3
Toulo de Graffenried Maserati Switzerland 2 2
Mike Nazaruk Kurtis Kraft United States 2 2
Louis Rosier Maserati France 2 2
Paco Godia 2 2
Troy Ruttman Kurtis Kraft United States 1.5* 1.5
Duane Carter Kurtis Kraft United States 1.5* 1.5
A walkover. Booooring....
Fangio would have had a perfect score, but I think Fangio assumed he would win the championship anyways. What a honorable person.
1955
Top five results count
Code: Select all
Driver Team Country Points Results (in order) Total Points
Juan Manuel Fangio Mercedes Argentina 8 8 8 6 8 38
Stirling Moss Mercedes Britain 2* 6 6 8 22
Jean Behra Maserati France 1.5* 3* 2* 2 4 12.5
Luigi Musso Maserati Italy 0.6* 3 4 2 9.6
Roberto Mieres Maserati Argentina 4 2* 3 9
Piero Taruffi Mercedes Italy 3 6 9
Eugenio Castellotti Lancia Italy 8 8
Bob Sweikert Kurtis Kraft United States 8 8
Karl Kling Mercedes Germany 2* 4 6
Cesare Perdisa Maserati Italy 3* 2 5
Luigi Villoresi Lancia Italy 4 4
Jimmy Davies Kurtis Kraft United States 4 4
Johnny Thomson Kurtis Kraft United States 3 3
Louis Chiron Lancia Italy 3 3
Tony Bettenhausen Kurtis Kraft United States 3* 3
Paul Russo Kurtis Kraft United States 3* 3
Carlos Menditeguy Maserati Argentina 3 3
Harry Schell Maserati United States 2.1** 2.1
Hans Herrmann Mercedes Germany 2* 2
Jacques Pollet Gordini France 2 2
John Fitch Maserati United States 2 2
Walt Faulkner Kurtis Kraft United States 1* 1
Bill Homeier Kurtis Kraft United States 1* 1
Sergio Mantovani Maserati Italy 0.6* 0.6
Looks like a walkover, but Moss had a good shot of winning the championship. The only problem was that his engine went.

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1956
Top Five Results count on a 8-6-4-3-2 basis.
Moss nearly wins AH-GAIN, but Behra clinches it with a race to go. Behra deserved this one, though.
Top Five Results count on a 8-6-4-3-2 basis.
Code: Select all
Driver Team Country Points Results (in order) Total Points
Jean Behra Maserati France 8 6 3 8 8 6 36 (39)
Stirling Moss Maserati Britain 8 4* 3* 8 8 31
Paco Godia Maserati Spain 3 2 4 4 13
Cesare Perdisa Maserati Italy 2 4* 3* 3 12
Harry Schell Vanwall United States 6 3 9
Pat Flaherty Watson United States 8 8
Luigi Villoresi Maserati United States 4 4 8
Louis Rosier Maserati France 2 4 2 8
Mike Hawthorn Maserati Britain 6 6
Sam Hanks Kurtis Kraft United States 6 6
Jack Fairman Connaught Britain 6 6
Ron Flockhart Connaught Britain 6 6
Hernando da Silva Gordini Brazil 4 2 6
Don Freeland Phillips United States 4 4
Johnnie Parsons Kurtis Kraft United States 3 3
Dick Rathmann Kurtis Kraft United States 2 2
Chico Landi Maserati Brazil 2* 2
Gerino Gerini Maserati Italy 2* 2
Luigi Piotti Maserati Italy 2 2
Alberto Uria Maserati Uruguay 1.5* 1.5
Oscar Gonzalez Maserati Uruguay 1.5* 1.5
Elie Bayol Gordini France 1.5* 1.5
Andre Pilette Gordini Belgium 1.5* 1.5
Moss nearly wins AH-GAIN, but Behra clinches it with a race to go. Behra deserved this one, though.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1957
Top Five results count, with a 8-6-4-3-2 system.
Note that there are four entries in France (the fourth race) because no other cars classified!
Fangio wins AH-GAIN, but next year should be very interesting.
Top Five results count, with a 8-6-4-3-2 system.
Code: Select all
Driver Country Constructor Points finishes (in order) Total Points
Juan Manuel Fangio Argentina Maserati 8 8 8 8 6 6 38 (44)
Stirling Moss Britain Vanwall 4* 6 8 8 26
Harry Schell United States Maserati 3 6 3 4 1.5* 17.5
Jean Behra France Maserati 6 4 4 14
Tony Brooks Britain Vanwall 6 4* 2 12
Masten Gregory United States Maserati 4 2 3 4 10
Sam Hanks United States Epperly 8 8
Stuart Lewis-Evans Britain Connaught 3 3 2 8
Jim Rathmann United States Epperly 6 6
Roy Salvadori Britain Cooper 6 6
Carlos Menditeguy Argentina Maserati 4 4
Jimmy Bryan United States Kuzma 4 4
Bob Gerard Britain Cooper 4 4
Jack Brabham Australia Cooper 2 1.5* 3.5
Paul Russo United States Kurtis Kraft 3 3
Jo Bonnier Sweden Maserati 2 2
Andy Linden United States Kurtis Kraft 2 2
Ivor Bueb Britain Maserati 2 2
Mike MacDowel Britain Cooper 1.5* 1.5
Giorgio Scarlatti Italy Maserati 1.5* 1.5
Note that there are four entries in France (the fourth race) because no other cars classified!
Fangio wins AH-GAIN, but next year should be very interesting.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1958
Top Six results count, on a 8-6-4-3-2 basis.
Moss wins a championship!
Harry Schell actually had a good shot of winning, but he dropped back, then Salvadori and Brooks caught up to him. By that time, Moss was on his way to winning, and locked it by the second-last race.
Top Six Results Count, only best result of the race for the team counts!
This was very interesting. Cooper and Vanwall alternated the lead, until some time mid-way through the season when Cooper fell back and Vanwall added to their points total. Brooks and Moss both contributed, and they eventually blew away the competition, clinching the championship with a race to go (Cooper could add a maximum of two points after the race), and having 62 out of a possible 80 total points that could be scored.
Note that Monaco only had four drivers finish, and that Italy only had four people count for the points. I skipped the Indy 500 because nobody else that scored in the Indy 500 raced elsewhere.
Top Six results count, on a 8-6-4-3-2 basis.
Code: Select all
Driver Country Constructor Points finishes (in order) Total Points
Stirling Moss Britain Cooper/Vanwall 8 8 8 8 8 40
Tony Brooks Britain Vanwall 8 2 8 8 26
Roy Salvadori Britain Cooper 3 8 6 6 2 25
Harry Schell United States Maserati/BRM 3 4 6 3 4 3 4 24 (27)
Stuart Lewis-Evans Britain Vanwall 6 6 6 18
Jack Brabham Australia Cooper 6 4 3 2 15
Maurice Trintignant France Cooper/Maserati 8 2 4 14
Juan Manuel Fangio Argentina Maserati 6 6 12
Jean Behra France Maserati/BRM 4 4 4 12
Cliff Allison Britain Lotus 3 2 4 3 12
Jo Bonnier Sweden Maserati 2 6 8
Graham Hill Britain Lotus 4 4
Phil Hill United States Maserati 3 3
Bruce McLaren New Zealand Cooper 3 3
Masten Gregory United States Maserati 3 3
Carlos Menditeguy Argentina Maserati 2 2
Edgar Barth Germany Porsche 2 2
Moss wins a championship!

Top Six Results Count, only best result of the race for the team counts!
Code: Select all
Constructor Points Finishes Total Points
Vanwall 8 8 8 6 8 8 8 8 48 (62)
Cooper 8 8 3 4 8 6 2 6 2 40 (47)
BRM 4 6 3 4 4 6 27
Maserati 6 2 6 3 17
Lotus 3 2 4 4 13
Porsche 2 2
This was very interesting. Cooper and Vanwall alternated the lead, until some time mid-way through the season when Cooper fell back and Vanwall added to their points total. Brooks and Moss both contributed, and they eventually blew away the competition, clinching the championship with a race to go (Cooper could add a maximum of two points after the race), and having 62 out of a possible 80 total points that could be scored.
Note that Monaco only had four drivers finish, and that Italy only had four people count for the points. I skipped the Indy 500 because nobody else that scored in the Indy 500 raced elsewhere.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Resurrecting this thread! 
1959
8-6-4-3-2, Top five results count
Drivers
Constructors
Only the top finisher in the team counts for the championship (Brabham scores 1st, Trintignant scores 3rd, Brabham's 8 points count but Trintignant's 4 does not)
Although Moss gave Brabham a run for his money, Brabham's good start paid off. The constructors' was a walkover.
And with this, the 50's are finally over! (I hated that fastest lap point nonsense, as well as the shared drives)

1959
8-6-4-3-2, Top five results count
Drivers
Code: Select all
Driver Country Constructor Points finishes Total
Jack Brabham Australia Cooper 8 6 8 8 6 4 36 (40)
Stirling Moss Britain BRM 6 8 8 22
Maurice Trignant France Cooper 6 2 8 4 2 6 26 (28)
Bruce McLaren New Zealand Cooper 4 6 4 8 22
Jo Bonnier Sweden BRM 8 6 3 17
Harry Schell United States BRM 3 3 3 3 4 16
Masten Gregory United States Cooper 4 6 10
Innes Ireland Britain Lotus 3 3 6
Roy Salvadori Britain Cooper/AM 3 2 5
Ron Flockhart Britain BRM 4 4
Ian Burgess Britain Cooper 4 4
Graham Hill Britain Lotus 2 2
Giorgio Scarlatti Italy Maserati 2 2
Harry Blanchard United States Porsche 2 2
Constructors
Only the top finisher in the team counts for the championship (Brabham scores 1st, Trintignant scores 3rd, Brabham's 8 points count but Trintignant's 4 does not)
Code: Select all
Constructor Points Finishes Total
Cooper 8 6 8 8 8 8 8 8 40 (62)
BRM 8 4 6 6 3 4 28 (31)
Lotus 3 3 6
Maserati 2 2
Aston Martin 2 2
Porsche 2 2
Although Moss gave Brabham a run for his money, Brabham's good start paid off. The constructors' was a walkover.
And with this, the 50's are finally over! (I hated that fastest lap point nonsense, as well as the shared drives)
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1960
8-6-4-3-2-1, Best six results counted
Drivers'
In the first race, Trintignant and Moss shared the drive to third. But they don't get any points
And C.G. means Carel Godin. I thought his name was long; until I looked up his name on Wikipedia and found is full name!
Constructors'
Only the top finisher in the team counts for the championship
You really can't help someone winning five straight races in a row!
8-6-4-3-2-1, Best six results counted
Drivers'
Code: Select all
Driver Constuctor Points Finishes Total
Jack Brabham Cooper 8 8 8 8 8 3 43
Bruce McLaren Cooper 8 6 6 4 3 6 4 34 (37)
Innes Ireland Lotus 3 1 6 4 2 6 22
Stirling Moss Lotus 8 3 8 19
Olivier Gendebien Cooper 4 6 1 11
Jim Clark Lotus 3 2 4 9
Tony Brooks Cooper 4 2 3 9
Giulio Cabianca Cooper 8 8
Graham Hill BRM 2 4 1 7
Jo Bonnier BRM 2 3 2 7
John Surtees Lotus 6 6
Hans Herrmann Porsche 6 6
Henry Taylor Cooper 2 3 1 6
Carlos Mediteguy Cooper 4 4
Edgar Barth Porsche 4 4
Piero Drogo Cooper 3 3
Lucien Bianchi Cooper 2 2
Wolfgang Seidel Cooper 2 2
Alberto Larreta Lotus 1 1
C.G. de Beaufort Cooper 1 1
Ron Flockhart Lotus 1 1
Fred Gamble Behra-Porsche 1 1
Phil Hill Cooper 1 1
In the first race, Trintignant and Moss shared the drive to third. But they don't get any points

And C.G. means Carel Godin. I thought his name was long; until I looked up his name on Wikipedia and found is full name!

Constructors'
Only the top finisher in the team counts for the championship
Code: Select all
Constructor Points finishes Total Points
Cooper 8 6 8 8 8 8 8 8 4 48 (66)
Lotus 3 8 6 3 2 6 4 8 35 (40)
BRM 2 3 4 1 2 12
Porsche 6 6
Behra-Porsche 1 1
You really can't help someone winning five straight races in a row!
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Prediction time again!
Changes from 1970+ where a Ferrari driver was the real champion:
1975 Emerson Fittipaldi
1977 Jody Scheckter
1979 Jacques Laffite (Alan Jones will lose out due to his poor first half of the year)
2000 Hakkinen
2001 Coulthard
2002 Montoya
2003 Raikkonen
2004 Button
2007 Alonso (as much as pains me to say it I feel he has more to gain than Hamilton)
Other possible changes:
1983 Prost beats Piquet with more to gain
1994 I think Hill and Schumacher tie. Can't remember who will get the most wins!
1999 I wonder if Frentzen gains enough to overhaul Hakkinen? I doubt it but it's possible with Frentzen's maximising consistency
2010 Could be Webber or Hamilton - they could gain more than Vettel?
Changes to constructor's champions Ferrari won in real life:
1982 McLaren
1983 Renault
1999 McLaren
2000 McLaren
2001 McLaren
2002 Williams
2003 Williams
2004 BAR!!!!
2007 McLaren if you don't discount their constructors points, BMW Sauber if you do
2008 BMW Sauber could overhaul McLaren as they may suffer with Kovalainen - Kubica and Heidfeld were awfully consistent
Changes from 1970+ where a Ferrari driver was the real champion:
1975 Emerson Fittipaldi
1977 Jody Scheckter
1979 Jacques Laffite (Alan Jones will lose out due to his poor first half of the year)
2000 Hakkinen
2001 Coulthard
2002 Montoya
2003 Raikkonen
2004 Button
2007 Alonso (as much as pains me to say it I feel he has more to gain than Hamilton)
Other possible changes:
1983 Prost beats Piquet with more to gain
1994 I think Hill and Schumacher tie. Can't remember who will get the most wins!
1999 I wonder if Frentzen gains enough to overhaul Hakkinen? I doubt it but it's possible with Frentzen's maximising consistency
2010 Could be Webber or Hamilton - they could gain more than Vettel?
Changes to constructor's champions Ferrari won in real life:
1982 McLaren
1983 Renault
1999 McLaren
2000 McLaren
2001 McLaren
2002 Williams
2003 Williams
2004 BAR!!!!
2007 McLaren if you don't discount their constructors points, BMW Sauber if you do
2008 BMW Sauber could overhaul McLaren as they may suffer with Kovalainen - Kubica and Heidfeld were awfully consistent
Last edited by James1978 on 22 Mar 2011, 23:17, edited 1 time in total.
"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
How about just putting it in insanely small text (Size five for me) so people who want to know can just click "reply" and look in the text box, or just copying the small text and pasting it in notepad. Simple, really.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Good thinking, and fixed! 

"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1961
9-6-4-3-2-1, Best Five results counted
Drivers'
The championship race open to three driver with two races to go, Gurney took an incredible win in Italy, eliminating Clark and making Moss to have to win to also win the championship. It wasn't to be, Moss' engine gave way in Lap 58 in Watkins Glen, making Gurney champion for 1961. From what I see, the best has yet to come...
Again, C.G. stands for Carel Godin.
Constructors'
Only the top finisher in the team counts for the championship (and best five results count)
Another close one. This time Porsche and Lotus had a great shot of winning, only for Innes Ireland to win for Lotus and eventually take the constructors. But Gurney didn't care, because he won the Drivers' Championship!
Props go to Porsche from going from crap to 2nd in the Constructors' within a year!
Interesting fact: Five drivers won the first five races. It looked like another "Hawthorn effect," until Moss won in Germany (the third to last race). In total, Six drivers won a race in 1961:
Stirling Moss (twice)
Jim Clark
John Surtees
Dan Gurney (twice)
Jack Brabham
Innes Ireland
9-6-4-3-2-1, Best Five results counted
Drivers'
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor Points Finishes Total Points
Dan Gurney Porsche 6 6 9 3 2 9 6 36 (40)
Stirling Moss Lotus 9 6 3 9 27
Jim Clark Lotus 9 6 6 21
Bruce McLaren Cooper 4 3 2 3 6 3 19 (21)
John Surtees Cooper 3 9 4 16
Jack Brabham Cooper 4 9 13
Innes Ireland Lotus 4 9 13
Jo Bonnier Porsche 4 1 6 1 12
Tony Brooks BRM 1 1 3 4 9
Jackie Lewis Cooper 2 4 6
Roy Salvadori Cooper 4 2 6
Graham Hill BRM 2 2 2 6
Maurice Trintignant Cooper 3 3
Cliff Allison Lotus 2 1 3
Hans Herrmann Porsche 1 1
Masten Gregory Cooper 1 1
C. G. de Beaufort Porsche 1 1
The championship race open to three driver with two races to go, Gurney took an incredible win in Italy, eliminating Clark and making Moss to have to win to also win the championship. It wasn't to be, Moss' engine gave way in Lap 58 in Watkins Glen, making Gurney champion for 1961. From what I see, the best has yet to come...
Again, C.G. stands for Carel Godin.
Constructors'
Only the top finisher in the team counts for the championship (and best five results count)
Code: Select all
Constructor Points Finishes Total Points
Lotus 9 9 4 6 9 9 42 (46)
Porsche 6 6 9 6 2 9 6 36 (44)
Cooper 4 4 9 3 9 4 6 3 32 (42)
BRM 2 2 1 3 4 12
Another close one. This time Porsche and Lotus had a great shot of winning, only for Innes Ireland to win for Lotus and eventually take the constructors. But Gurney didn't care, because he won the Drivers' Championship!
Props go to Porsche from going from crap to 2nd in the Constructors' within a year!
Interesting fact: Five drivers won the first five races. It looked like another "Hawthorn effect," until Moss won in Germany (the third to last race). In total, Six drivers won a race in 1961:
Stirling Moss (twice)
Jim Clark
John Surtees
Dan Gurney (twice)
Jack Brabham
Innes Ireland
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Two random thoughts about this championship that have really amused me:
Who will be the only non-McLaren race winner in 1988, and who will be the only non Renault/McLaren race winner in 2005.
Who will be the only non-McLaren race winner in 1988, and who will be the only non Renault/McLaren race winner in 2005.

"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
James1978 wrote:...and who will be the only non Renault/McLaren race winner in 2005.
Oh my! Oh my indeed!

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
Klon wrote:James1978 wrote:...and who will be the only non Renault/McLaren race winner in 2005.
Oh my! Oh my indeed!
The problem is that the races Ferrari won in 1988/2005 were because the teams mentioned retired/withdrew.
kevinbotz wrote:Cantonese is a completely nonsensical f*cking alien language masquerading as some grossly bastardised form of Chinese
Gonzo wrote:Wasn't there some sort of communisim in the East part of Germany?
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
tommykl wrote:Klon wrote:James1978 wrote:...and who will be the only non Renault/McLaren race winner in 2005.
Oh my! Oh my indeed!
The problem is that the races Ferrari won in 1988/2005 were because the teams mentioned retired/withdrew.
I know but still , when you think there are a lot more worthy candidates than the ones who it will actually be on those occasions (ie. Williams, Benetton, Lotus in 1988, and Williams, Toyota, BAR etc in 2005 )

"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1962
For Drivers - Top six results count
For Constructors - Top six results count, with only one car scoring for constructors
DRIVERS
CONSTRUCTORS
For Drivers - Top six results count
For Constructors - Top six results count, with only one car scoring for constructors
DRIVERS
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor Points Finishes Total Points
Graham Hill BRM 9 3 6 3 9 9 6 9 48 (54)
Jim Clark Lotus 9 9 3 9 30
Bruce McLaren Cooper 9 3 4 2 4 4 6 30 (32)
John Surtees Lola 6 4 2 6 6 24
Tony Maggs Cooper 4 6 1 2 4 17
Dan Gurney Porsche 9 4 2 15
Jack Brabham Lotus/Brabham 2 3 2 3 3 13
Richie Ginther BRM 4 6 10
Jo Bonnier Porsche 2 4 1 3 10
Trevor Taylor Lotus 6 6
C.G. de Beaufort Porsche 3 2 1 6
Innes Ireland Lotus 2 2
Jackie Lewis Cooper 1 1
Maurice Trintignant Lotus 1 1
Nino Vaccarella Lotus 1 1
Masten Gregory Lotus 1 1
Neville Lederle Lotus 1 1
CONSTRUCTORS
Code: Select all
Constructor Points Finishes Total Points
BRM 9 3 6 4 3 9 9 6 9 48 (58)
Lotus 6 2 9 9 3 1 9 2 38 (41)
Cooper 4 9 6 4 2 4 4 6 33 (39)
Porsche 3 4 2 9 4 3 2 25 (27)
Lola 6 4 2 6 6 24
Brabham 3 3 6
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1963
9-6-4-3-2-1
Top six Results count
In Constructors, Top result for the team counts
Drivers'
Constructors'
In the French GP, Graham Hill was DSQ'd for a push start, so I moved everybody up one spot. For example, Jo Siffert originally finished sixth, in this championship, he finished fifth.
Not much mattered in that situation, though, as Clark maxed out his points total. As a result, Lotus maxed out their points total as well, oddly enough at the same race, in Italy.
9-6-4-3-2-1
Top six Results count
In Constructors, Top result for the team counts
Drivers'
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor Points Total Points
Jim Clark Lotus 9 9 9 9 9 9 4 9 9 54 (76)
Richie Ginther BRM 6 3 3 4 6 6 6 4 32 (38)
Graham Hill BRM 9 6 9 3 4 31
Dan Gurney Brabham 4 6 3 1 6 20
Bruce McLaren Cooper 4 6 4 3 17
Jack Brabham Brabham 4 1 2 3 6 15
Tony Maggs Cooper 3 6 1 1 11
Jo Bonnier Cooper 1 2 2 2 2 9
Innes Ireland BRP 4 3 7
Jim Hall Lotus 1 2 3 6
Jo Siffert Lotus 2 2 4
Gerhard Mitter Porsche 4 4
Lorenzo Bandini BRM 3 3
C.G. de Beaufort Porsche 1 2 3
Trevor Taylor Lotus 2 2
Chris Amon Lola 1 1 2
Peter Broeker Stebro 1 1
Constructors'
Code: Select all
Constructor Points Total Points
Lotus 2 9 9 9 9 9 9 4 9 9 54 (78)
BRM 9 3 3 6 6 6 9 4 4 40 (50)
Brabham 4 6 4 1 2 3 6 6 29 (32)
Cooper 4 6 6 2 4 2 3 25 (27)
BRP 4 3 9
Porsche 1 4 2 7
Lola 1 1 2
Stebro 1 1
In the French GP, Graham Hill was DSQ'd for a push start, so I moved everybody up one spot. For example, Jo Siffert originally finished sixth, in this championship, he finished fifth.
Not much mattered in that situation, though, as Clark maxed out his points total. As a result, Lotus maxed out their points total as well, oddly enough at the same race, in Italy.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
I invented a new display for the championships. This is mainly because I hate having to count manually how many wins, 2nds, 3rds, etc. one person has.
I'm not sure how to put it in words, but here's an example:
(I'm putting really bad examples here)
So you want to know how this works? Well, on the top row is the points system. 9 for a win, 6 for 2nd, 4 for 3rd, all the way down to one point for sixth. Under each driver is the number of 1st, 2nd, 3rd and so on that the driver got in the season.
So Here's how the calculation would work
9x2=18
6x3=18
4x1=4
3x0=0
2x1=2
1x3=3
18+18+4+2+3=45 points!
Get it? If not, ask below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1964
The 1964 season was shaping up to be a close one. After the Austrian Grand Prix, Graham Hill was leading Jim Clark after seven races, by only six points. The top three looked like so:
As you can see, Clark had won three times, Hill had one twice, and Ginther won once so far. (Gurney also won a race)
With the next race at Monza, in Italy, oddly enough neither Hill or Clark had scored points for the event, with Hill going out on the first lap due to clutch problems and Clark having an engine failure after 28 laps. With Ginther in second place, and McLaren winning, the top three looked like this:
And all of the sudden a two-horse race turned into a three-horse race. It was a somewhat different story in the constructors, with two races to go, the constructors' looked like so:
So BRM has a somewhat comfy lead for the constructors.
The next race was at Watkins Glen. Jim Clark's car was having problems, so he and Mike Spence swapped cars. Not too long after the swap, Clark's old car and Spence's new car (the same one) had an injection problem and was out of the race! Clark, now unable to score points, but still tried, eventually classified his car in seventh, albeit running out of fuel and 8 laps down on the eventual winner, which was... Graham Hill!
It would not matter anyways since shared drives were not legal in F1, so Clark was unable to score points even though he classified in seventh.
...which meant Ginther slipped into 2nd place with eight finishes to his name, so a win in his next race would be adding seven points that count in the championship. With Graham Hill at 47, he had won the championship with a race to go.
Drivers'
9-6-4-3-2-1, best six results count
Constructors'
Best six results count, with points being added by only the best placed driver
(E.G. if Joe finished 2nd and Phil finished 6th and they were on the same team, only Joe's results would count for the constructors'.)
Race Winners
Monaco - Graham Hill (BRM)
Netherlands - Jim Clark (Lotus)
Belgium - Jim Clark (Lotus)
France - Dan Gurney (Brabham)
Britain - Jim Clark (Lotus)
Germany - Graham Hill (BRM)
Austria - Richie Ginther (BRM)
Italy - Bruce McLaren (Cooper)
USA - Graham Hill (BRM)
Mexico - Dan Gurney (Brabham)
I'm not sure how to put it in words, but here's an example:
(I'm putting really bad examples here)
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Jean-Denis Délétraz Mercedes 2 3 1 0 1 3 45
So you want to know how this works? Well, on the top row is the points system. 9 for a win, 6 for 2nd, 4 for 3rd, all the way down to one point for sixth. Under each driver is the number of 1st, 2nd, 3rd and so on that the driver got in the season.
So Here's how the calculation would work
9x2=18
6x3=18
4x1=4
3x0=0
2x1=2
1x3=3
18+18+4+2+3=45 points!
Get it? If not, ask below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1964
The 1964 season was shaping up to be a close one. After the Austrian Grand Prix, Graham Hill was leading Jim Clark after seven races, by only six points. The top three looked like so:
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Graham Hill BRM 2 1 1 0 1 0 36
Jim Clark Lotus 3 0 0 1 0 0 30
Richie Ginther BRM 1 1 0 1 2 1 23
As you can see, Clark had won three times, Hill had one twice, and Ginther won once so far. (Gurney also won a race)
With the next race at Monza, in Italy, oddly enough neither Hill or Clark had scored points for the event, with Hill going out on the first lap due to clutch problems and Clark having an engine failure after 28 laps. With Ginther in second place, and McLaren winning, the top three looked like this:
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Graham Hill BRM 2 1 1 0 1 0 36
Jim Clark Lotus 3 0 0 1 0 0 30
Richie Ginther BRM 1 2 0 1 2 1 28 (29)
And all of the sudden a two-horse race turned into a three-horse race. It was a somewhat different story in the constructors, with two races to go, the constructors' looked like so:
Code: Select all
Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
BRM 3 3 1 1 0 0 45 (52)
Lotus 3 0 1 2 0 1 37 (38)
Brabham 1 2 2 0 2 0 31 (33)
Cooper 1 1 0 1 1 1 23
BRP 0 0 1 1 0 0 7
So BRM has a somewhat comfy lead for the constructors.
The next race was at Watkins Glen. Jim Clark's car was having problems, so he and Mike Spence swapped cars. Not too long after the swap, Clark's old car and Spence's new car (the same one) had an injection problem and was out of the race! Clark, now unable to score points, but still tried, eventually classified his car in seventh, albeit running out of fuel and 8 laps down on the eventual winner, which was... Graham Hill!
It would not matter anyways since shared drives were not legal in F1, so Clark was unable to score points even though he classified in seventh.
...which meant Ginther slipped into 2nd place with eight finishes to his name, so a win in his next race would be adding seven points that count in the championship. With Graham Hill at 47, he had won the championship with a race to go.
Drivers'
9-6-4-3-2-1, best six results count
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Graham Hill BRM 3 1 1 0 1 0 47
Jim Clark Lotus 3 0 1 1 0 0 34
Richie Ginther BRM 1 2 1 1 3 1 30 (35)
Bruce McLaren Cooper 1 1 0 1 0 1 21
Dan Gurney Brabham 2 0 0 0 0 1 19
Jo Siffert Brabham 0 2 0 0 1 0 14
Peter Arundell Lotus 0 1 1 1 0 0 13
Jack Brabham Brabham 0 0 3 0 0 0 12
Bob Anderson Brabham 0 1 0 0 2 0 10
Mike Spence Lotus 0 1 0 1 0 1 10
Tony Maggs BRM 0 0 1 1 0 0 7
Innes Ireland BRP 0 0 1 1 0 0 7
Maurice Trintignant BRM 0 0 1 0 0 0 4
Jo Bonnier Cooper 0 0 0 0 2 0 4
Walt Hansgen Lotus 0 0 0 1 0 0 4
Phil Hill Cooper 0 0 0 1 0 1 4
Chris Amon Lotus 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
Giancarlo Baghetti BRM 0 0 0 0 0 2 2
Trevor Taylor BRP 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
Mike Hailwood Lotus 0 0 0 0 0 2 2
Constructors'
Best six results count, with points being added by only the best placed driver
(E.G. if Joe finished 2nd and Phil finished 6th and they were on the same team, only Joe's results would count for the constructors'.)
Code: Select all
Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
BRM 4 3 1 1 2 0 48 (65)
Lotus 3 1 1 3 0 1 40 (47)
Brabham 2 3 2 0 2 0 40 (48)
Cooper 1 1 0 2 1 1 24
BRP 0 0 1 1 1 0 9
Race Winners
Monaco - Graham Hill (BRM)
Netherlands - Jim Clark (Lotus)
Belgium - Jim Clark (Lotus)
France - Dan Gurney (Brabham)
Britain - Jim Clark (Lotus)
Germany - Graham Hill (BRM)
Austria - Richie Ginther (BRM)
Italy - Bruce McLaren (Cooper)
USA - Graham Hill (BRM)
Mexico - Dan Gurney (Brabham)
Last edited by Aerospeed on 18 Jun 2011, 01:57, edited 1 time in total.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1965
This season was a walkover to say the least as Jim Clark and Lotus clinched the two championships with three races to go.
Drivers' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1, Top six results count
Constructors' Championship
Top six results count, only the top result from each team counts
Race Winners
South Africa - Jim Clark
Monaco - Graham Hill
Belgium - Jim Clark
France - Jim Clark
Britain - Jim Clark
Netherlands - Jim Clark
Germany - Jim Clark
Italy - Jackie Stewart
USA - Graham Hill
Mexico - Richie Ginther
This season was a walkover to say the least as Jim Clark and Lotus clinched the two championships with three races to go.
Drivers' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1, Top six results count
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Jim Clark Lotus 6 0 0 0 0 0 54
Graham Hill BRM 2 4 0 1 1 0 42 (47)
Jackie Stewart BRM 1 4 0 1 1 0 36 (38)
Dan Gurney Brabham 0 2 3 0 1 0 26
Bruce McLaren Cooper 0 0 2 2 0 0 14
Mike Spence Lotus 0 0 3 0 0 1 13
Richie Ginther Honda 1 0 0 0 1 2 11
Jack Brabham Brabham 0 0 1 1 1 0 9
Jo Siffert Brabham 0 0 0 2 1 1 9
Denny Hulme Brabham 0 0 1 0 1 1 7
Jochen Rindt Cooper 0 0 0 2 0 0 6
Jo Bonnier Brabham 0 0 0 0 1 4 6
Richard Attwood Lotus 0 0 0 0 1 1 3
Ronnie Bucknum Honda 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
Constructors' Championship
Top six results count, only the top result from each team counts
Code: Select all
Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Lotus 6 0 1 0 0 0 54 (58)
BRM 3 6 0 0 0 0 45 (63)
Brabham 0 2 4 2 1 1 28 (34)
Cooper 0 0 2 4 0 0 20
Honda 1 0 0 0 1 2 11
Race Winners
South Africa - Jim Clark
Monaco - Graham Hill
Belgium - Jim Clark
France - Jim Clark
Britain - Jim Clark
Netherlands - Jim Clark
Germany - Jim Clark
Italy - Jackie Stewart
USA - Graham Hill
Mexico - Richie Ginther
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1966
Drivers' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1, Top five results count
A washout. Brabham could have maxed out his points total but he didn't.
Constructors' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1, Top Five results count, with the best car scoring
Also a washout. This time the team maxed out their total.
On a rejectful note, Eagle, out of all teams, beat out McLaren! (And Honda too, on the last race
)
Race Winners
Monaco - Jackie Stewart
Belgium - Jochen Rindt
France - Jack Brabham
Britain - Jack Brabham
Netherlands - Jack Brabham
Germany - Jack Brabham
Italy - Denny Hulme
USA - Jim Clark
Mexico - John Surtees
Interesting note: New rule states that a car has to finish 90% of the race distance to be classified.... it came into use with points positions in the first two races, resulting in only three cars being classified in each race
Drivers' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1, Top five results count
Code: Select all
Driver Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Jack Brabham Brabham 4 2 0 0 0 0 42 (48)
Jochen Rindt Cooper 1 2 2 0 1 0 29 (31)
Denny Hulme Brabham 1 2 1 0 0 0 25
John Surtees Cooper 1 1 1 0 0 0 19
Graham Hill BRM 0 2 1 1 0 0 19
Jim Clark Lotus 1 0 1 1 0 0 16
Jackie Stewart BRM 1 0 0 1 1 0 14
Richie Ginther Cooper/Honda 0 0 1 1 0 0 7
Mike Spence Lotus 0 0 1 0 1 0 6
Bob Bondurant BRM 0 0 1 0 1 0 6
Dan Gurney Eagle 0 0 0 1 1 1 6
Bob Anderson Brabham 0 0 0 1 0 1 4
Jo Siffert Cooper 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
Bruce McLaren McLaren 0 0 0 0 1 1 3
John Taylor Brabham 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
Peter Arundell Lotus 0 0 0 0 0 2 2
Jo Bonnier Cooper 0 0 0 0 0 2 2
A washout. Brabham could have maxed out his points total but he didn't.
Constructors' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1, Top Five results count, with the best car scoring
Code: Select all
Constructor 9 6 4 3 2 1 Total Points
Brabham 5 2 0 0 0 0 45 (57)
Cooper 2 3 1 0 1 1 36 (43)
BRM 1 1 1 2 1 0 25 (27)
Lotus 1 0 2 1 0 0 20
Eagle 0 0 0 1 1 1 6
Honda 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
McLaren 0 0 0 0 1 1 3
Also a washout. This time the team maxed out their total.
On a rejectful note, Eagle, out of all teams, beat out McLaren! (And Honda too, on the last race

Race Winners
Monaco - Jackie Stewart
Belgium - Jochen Rindt
France - Jack Brabham
Britain - Jack Brabham
Netherlands - Jack Brabham
Germany - Jack Brabham
Italy - Denny Hulme
USA - Jim Clark
Mexico - John Surtees
Interesting note: New rule states that a car has to finish 90% of the race distance to be classified.... it came into use with points positions in the first two races, resulting in only three cars being classified in each race

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
To the three people who are reading this; is it OK if I just post the standings without any of the results in a table? For 1967 now we have the best five results from the first six races and the best four results from the last five or something like that. Too confusing to put it in one or two tables!! 

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
JeremyMcClean wrote:To the three people who are reading this; is it OK if I just post the standings without any of the results in a table? For 1967 now we have the best five results from the first six races and the best four results from the last five or something like that. Too confusing to put it in one or two tables!!
Absolutely, go for it - I find that easier to read than tables anyway.
"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season".
(Tony Jardine, 1988)

- TomWazzleshaw
- Posts: 14370
- Joined: 01 Apr 2009, 04:42
- Location: Curva do lel
- Contact:
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
James1978 wrote:JeremyMcClean wrote:To the three people who are reading this; is it OK if I just post the standings without any of the results in a table? For 1967 now we have the best five results from the first six races and the best four results from the last five or something like that. Too confusing to put it in one or two tables!!
Absolutely, go for it - I find that easier to read than tables anyway.
Make that 4 people

Biscione wrote:"Some Turkemenistani gulag repurposed for residential use" is the best way yet I've heard to describe North / East Glasgow.
Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
That's good. I already made 1967 before I posted the question.
------------------------------------------
1967
The championship had been all set for Denny Hulme, up until the final race, the top three were Hulme with 47 points, Jack Brabham with 43, and Jim Clark with 33. For Clark, his championship hopes were over, but Brabham could place second or higher and have Hulme turn to sod to win the championship.
Hulme originally turned to sod at the beginning, but recovered. The final standings for the Mexican GP were Clark, Brabham, Hulme, Surtees, Mike Spence and Pedro Rodriguez. Hence, Hulme didn't end up as sod and won the championship.
Driver's Championship
Top five results in first six races count, plus top four results in first five races
1st = Denny Hulme, Brabham, 51pts
2nd = Jack Brabham, Brabham, 47pts (49)
3rd = Jim Clark, Lotus, 42pts
4th = John Surtees, Honda, 22pts
5th = Pedro Rodriguez, Cooper, 17pts
6th = Graham Hill, Lotus, 15pts
7th = Dan Gurney, Eagle, 13pts
8th = Jackie Stewart, BRM, 10pts
9th = Mike Spence, BRM, 9pts
T-10th = Bruce McLaren, McLaren, 7pts (Best finish = 3rd)
T-10th = Jochen Rindt, Cooper, 7pts (Best finish = 3rd)
12th = Jo Siffert, Cooper, 7pts (Best finish = 4th [has two])
13th = Chris Irwin, BRM, 7pts (Best finish = 4th [has one])
14th = John Love, Cooper, 6pts
15th = Jo Bonnier, Cooper, 5pts
16th = Bob Anderson, Brabham, 3pts
17th = Guy Ligier, Brabham, 2pts
18th = Jacky Ickx, Cooper, 1pt
Constructors' Championship
The top five results from the first six races and the top four results from the last five races count, AND only the top finisher counts towards the championship.
1st = Brabham, 66pts (70)
2nd = Lotus, 53pts
3rd = Cooper, 32pts
4th = Honda, 22pts (has won)
5th = BRM, 22pts (did not win)
6th = Eagle, 13pts
Race Winners
South Africa - Pedro Rodriguez
Monaco - Denny Hulme
Netherlands - Jim Clark
Belgium - Dan Gurney
France - Jack Brabham
Britain - Jim Clark
Germany - Denny Hulme
Canada - Jack Brabham
Italy - John Surtees
USA - Jim Clark
Mexico - Jim Clark
Interestingly enough, only five people classified in Monaco.
--------------------
You're all right, this IS easier!
------------------------------------------
1967
The championship had been all set for Denny Hulme, up until the final race, the top three were Hulme with 47 points, Jack Brabham with 43, and Jim Clark with 33. For Clark, his championship hopes were over, but Brabham could place second or higher and have Hulme turn to sod to win the championship.
Hulme originally turned to sod at the beginning, but recovered. The final standings for the Mexican GP were Clark, Brabham, Hulme, Surtees, Mike Spence and Pedro Rodriguez. Hence, Hulme didn't end up as sod and won the championship.
Driver's Championship
Top five results in first six races count, plus top four results in first five races
1st = Denny Hulme, Brabham, 51pts
2nd = Jack Brabham, Brabham, 47pts (49)
3rd = Jim Clark, Lotus, 42pts
4th = John Surtees, Honda, 22pts
5th = Pedro Rodriguez, Cooper, 17pts
6th = Graham Hill, Lotus, 15pts
7th = Dan Gurney, Eagle, 13pts
8th = Jackie Stewart, BRM, 10pts
9th = Mike Spence, BRM, 9pts
T-10th = Bruce McLaren, McLaren, 7pts (Best finish = 3rd)
T-10th = Jochen Rindt, Cooper, 7pts (Best finish = 3rd)
12th = Jo Siffert, Cooper, 7pts (Best finish = 4th [has two])
13th = Chris Irwin, BRM, 7pts (Best finish = 4th [has one])
14th = John Love, Cooper, 6pts
15th = Jo Bonnier, Cooper, 5pts
16th = Bob Anderson, Brabham, 3pts
17th = Guy Ligier, Brabham, 2pts
18th = Jacky Ickx, Cooper, 1pt
Constructors' Championship
The top five results from the first six races and the top four results from the last five races count, AND only the top finisher counts towards the championship.
1st = Brabham, 66pts (70)
2nd = Lotus, 53pts
3rd = Cooper, 32pts
4th = Honda, 22pts (has won)
5th = BRM, 22pts (did not win)
6th = Eagle, 13pts
Race Winners
South Africa - Pedro Rodriguez
Monaco - Denny Hulme
Netherlands - Jim Clark
Belgium - Dan Gurney
France - Jack Brabham
Britain - Jim Clark
Germany - Denny Hulme
Canada - Jack Brabham
Italy - John Surtees
USA - Jim Clark
Mexico - Jim Clark
Interestingly enough, only five people classified in Monaco.
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You're all right, this IS easier!

Re: No Ferrari Alternative Championship
1968
Unusually, at the half-way mark, the championship battle had gone competitive, with Graham Hill in first with 24 points, Jackie Stewart in second with 19 and Denny Hulme in third with 14. The next race in Britain gave Hulme 2nd and Stewart 4th, making the points standings Hill 24, Stewart 22 and Hulme 20.
Jackie Stewart won the German GP, putting him in the lead with 31, Hill, finishing second, now had 30, and Hulme had 21 coming in 6th. Hulme easily won the Italian GP, now the standings was Stewart 31, Hill 30 and Hulme 30 as well. The Constructors' Championship was heating up (like the weather right now in my city), with Lotus at 45, Matra at 41 and McLaren at 39.
Hulme also won the Canadian GP, with Hill in 4th and Stewart in 6th. The standings were now Hulme 39, Hill 33, and Stewart 32. Lotus and McLaren were tied at 48 and Matra was at 42. Stewart, possibly inspired from Hulme's win, won in America, and Hill came in second. The points standings were now Stewart 41, Hulme and Hill 39. Lotus had 54, McLaren and Matra had 51.
At the final race in Mexico, Hulme qualified 2nd on the grid, only to retire with Suspension problems on Lap 10. Hill was 3rd on the grid, versus Stewart who was seventh on the grid. Hill went all the way to the win, while Stewart was left in seventh place.
Drivers' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1. Top five results from first and last six races count
1st = Graham Hill, Lotus, 48pts
2nd = Jackie Stewart, Matra, 41pts
3rd = Denny Hulme, McLaren, 39pts
4th = Bruce McLaren, McLaren, 24pts
5th = Pedro Rodriguez, BRM, 19pts
6th = John Surtees, Honda, 17pts
7th = Jo Siffert, Cooper, 14pts
8th = Jean-Pierre Beltoise, Matra, 13pts
9th = Jim Clark, Lotus, 9pts (won)
10th = Richard Attwood, BRM, 9pts (2nd)
11th = Jochen Rindt, Brabham, 8pts
12th = Jackie Oliver, Lotus, 7pts (1 4th, 1 3rd)
13th = Piers Courage, BRM, 7pts (1 4th, 1 5th, 1 6th)
14th = Johnny Servoz-Gavin, Matra, 6pts (1 2nd)
T-15th = Lucien Bianchi, Cooper, 6pts (1 3rd)
T-15th = Vic Elford, Cooper, 6pts (1 3rd)
17th = Lodovico Scarfiotti, Cooper, 6pts (2 4th)
18th = Jo Bonnier, McLaren, 5pts
19th = Brian Redman, Cooper, 4pts
T-20th = Silvio Moser, Brabham, 3pts (1 4th)
T-20th = Jack Brabham, Brabham, 3pts (1 4th)
T-20th = Dan Gurney, Brabham, 3pts (1 4th)
Constructors' Championship
Same as above, but only one result from each team counts
1st = Lotus, 63pts
2nd = McLaren, 56 (58)pts
3rd = Matra, 51pts
4th = BRM, 32pts
5th = Honda, 19pts
6th = Cooper, 17pts
7th = Brabham, 11pts
Race winners
South Africa - Jim Clark
Spain - Graham Hill
Monaco - Graham Hill
Belgium - Bruce McLaren
Netherlands - Jackie Stewart
France - John Surtees
Britain - Jo Siffert
Germany - Jackie Stewart
Italy - Denny Hulme
Canada - Denny Hulme
USA - Jackie Stewart
Mexico - Graham Hill
Unusually, at the half-way mark, the championship battle had gone competitive, with Graham Hill in first with 24 points, Jackie Stewart in second with 19 and Denny Hulme in third with 14. The next race in Britain gave Hulme 2nd and Stewart 4th, making the points standings Hill 24, Stewart 22 and Hulme 20.
Jackie Stewart won the German GP, putting him in the lead with 31, Hill, finishing second, now had 30, and Hulme had 21 coming in 6th. Hulme easily won the Italian GP, now the standings was Stewart 31, Hill 30 and Hulme 30 as well. The Constructors' Championship was heating up (like the weather right now in my city), with Lotus at 45, Matra at 41 and McLaren at 39.
Hulme also won the Canadian GP, with Hill in 4th and Stewart in 6th. The standings were now Hulme 39, Hill 33, and Stewart 32. Lotus and McLaren were tied at 48 and Matra was at 42. Stewart, possibly inspired from Hulme's win, won in America, and Hill came in second. The points standings were now Stewart 41, Hulme and Hill 39. Lotus had 54, McLaren and Matra had 51.
At the final race in Mexico, Hulme qualified 2nd on the grid, only to retire with Suspension problems on Lap 10. Hill was 3rd on the grid, versus Stewart who was seventh on the grid. Hill went all the way to the win, while Stewart was left in seventh place.
Drivers' Championship
9-6-4-3-2-1. Top five results from first and last six races count
1st = Graham Hill, Lotus, 48pts
2nd = Jackie Stewart, Matra, 41pts
3rd = Denny Hulme, McLaren, 39pts
4th = Bruce McLaren, McLaren, 24pts
5th = Pedro Rodriguez, BRM, 19pts
6th = John Surtees, Honda, 17pts
7th = Jo Siffert, Cooper, 14pts
8th = Jean-Pierre Beltoise, Matra, 13pts
9th = Jim Clark, Lotus, 9pts (won)
10th = Richard Attwood, BRM, 9pts (2nd)
11th = Jochen Rindt, Brabham, 8pts
12th = Jackie Oliver, Lotus, 7pts (1 4th, 1 3rd)
13th = Piers Courage, BRM, 7pts (1 4th, 1 5th, 1 6th)
14th = Johnny Servoz-Gavin, Matra, 6pts (1 2nd)
T-15th = Lucien Bianchi, Cooper, 6pts (1 3rd)
T-15th = Vic Elford, Cooper, 6pts (1 3rd)
17th = Lodovico Scarfiotti, Cooper, 6pts (2 4th)
18th = Jo Bonnier, McLaren, 5pts
19th = Brian Redman, Cooper, 4pts
T-20th = Silvio Moser, Brabham, 3pts (1 4th)
T-20th = Jack Brabham, Brabham, 3pts (1 4th)
T-20th = Dan Gurney, Brabham, 3pts (1 4th)
Constructors' Championship
Same as above, but only one result from each team counts
1st = Lotus, 63pts
2nd = McLaren, 56 (58)pts
3rd = Matra, 51pts
4th = BRM, 32pts
5th = Honda, 19pts
6th = Cooper, 17pts
7th = Brabham, 11pts
Race winners
South Africa - Jim Clark
Spain - Graham Hill
Monaco - Graham Hill
Belgium - Bruce McLaren
Netherlands - Jackie Stewart
France - John Surtees
Britain - Jo Siffert
Germany - Jackie Stewart
Italy - Denny Hulme
Canada - Denny Hulme
USA - Jackie Stewart
Mexico - Graham Hill