- 16 Jul 11, 18:27#266151
This is something that has always fascinated me about F1. The way sometimes the fastest car/driver package doesnt always win the Championship.
Take 2005 for instance and Kimi Raikkonen in the McLaren. In spite of winning 7 races, driving the car superbly, and the car itself being comfortably faster than its nearest competitor Renault Kimi was comfortably denied by Alonso. At Imola, Europe and Germany the car broke with Kimi leading handing the victory to his immediate competitor. At France, Britain and Italy Raikkonen was easily fastest but his race was hugely compromised by 10 place grid penalties whilst Alonso managed 1 win and 2 second places. And at Turkey and Spa Kimi was comfortably leading McLaren 1-2s when twice his teammate managed to throw it off the road with less than 3 laps to go granting Alonso extra points to help him along in his Championship cause.
No offence to Alonso who maximised his cars potential at almost every race in 2005 by Kimi was well robbed from where I saw it.
Take 2005 for instance and Kimi Raikkonen in the McLaren. In spite of winning 7 races, driving the car superbly, and the car itself being comfortably faster than its nearest competitor Renault Kimi was comfortably denied by Alonso. At Imola, Europe and Germany the car broke with Kimi leading handing the victory to his immediate competitor. At France, Britain and Italy Raikkonen was easily fastest but his race was hugely compromised by 10 place grid penalties whilst Alonso managed 1 win and 2 second places. And at Turkey and Spa Kimi was comfortably leading McLaren 1-2s when twice his teammate managed to throw it off the road with less than 3 laps to go granting Alonso extra points to help him along in his Championship cause.
No offence to Alonso who maximised his cars potential at almost every race in 2005 by Kimi was well robbed from where I saw it.