Tuesday 2 December 2014

After Race 19: Abu Dhabi

The 65th Formula One season is now firmly consigned to the history books. Lewis Hamilton became the sixteenth multiple champion in the sport – meaning that exactly half of all F1 title winners have won it more than once.

A season that started off with so many unknowns as F1 began its V6-turbo-hybrid era and the one thing which remains loud and clear is this: F1 is the pinnacle of motorsport technology. The outstanding research and development done by some of the world’s most intelligent minds meant that there were astonishingly few reliability problems (compared to those expected). Cars were still damn quick despite having to eke out race fuel and the racing was bloody exciting. Of course, the new era came at a cost – quite literally. Marussia and Caterham are no more but even that pales into significance as we pray each day for the full recovery of Jules Bianchi.

A smaller F1 grid next year means less room for youngsters to make their mark. Max Verstappen is the notable exception to that but he is helped by the terrific Red Bull program – the company has been one of F1’s biggest assets in the past two decades, continually investing heavily into motorsports through the economic downturn at a time when major car manufacturers were pulling out. As I’ve mentioned before, the RBR model is perfect for modern F1. Most teams have a junior program of some format in other formulae, so why not run a junior team in F1 like RBR/STR? Ferrari and McLaren could purchase the assets of the defunct teams and a) keep hundreds of people employed and b) run their junior drivers like Stoffel Vandoorne and Raffaele Marciello and co.

Finally, before we get cracking with the F1 Power Rankings of the season, a reminder that these standings combine a mixture of overall season performance weighted by recent momentum.

1. Lewis Hamilton
The best man won. Of that, there can be no doubt. Eleven race wins, more than double his team-mate, and an eventual championship-winning margin of 67pts – even if skewed by the horrendous double points – is not flattering to Lewis. It would have been damaging to F1 had he not won the title. There’s nothing more to add about Hamilton, such will the blanket coverage be for the next few weeks, and he’ll now go head-to-head with Rory McIlroy for BBC Sports Personality of the Year honours.
Lewis finishes his season with a W and a second title
Source: Mercedes AMG Petronas (Facebook)
2. Daniel Ricciardo
I’m sure many people will think that Ricciardo was truly the best driver of 2014 given that not only was he the only non-Mercedes driver to win a race but he did so on three occasions. Just because Hamilton had the best car should not detract from his talent, so his P1 is rewarded in these F1 Power Rankings, but Ricciardo chased him all the way; it was a fantastic season from the smiling Aussie.
Source: F1 Fanatic
3. Jules Bianchi
Caterham somehow managed to turn up to Abu Dhabi but you’d have to think it rather unlikely they’ll be back next season. And so there we have it: the trio of new teams that entered the sport in 2010 have all collapsed within five years. And the only man to score points in those five seasons? Jules Bianchi. His excellent drive to P9 this season will live long in the memory of the F1 family. #ForzaJules #KeepFightingMichael
Source: Marussia F1 Team (Facebook)
4. Valtteri Bottas
There was only one Flying Finn this season and it wasn’t the world champion. Bottas came of age in his sophomore season having shown flashes of promise in last year’s uncompetitive machinery. Did the team let slip a race win earlier in the year? Possibly. Bolder strategy will be needed in 2015 but the future looks good for Williams.

5. Nico Rosberg
Nico will have gained many fans for his defiance at the end of the race as he wished to finish the season on track. He knows he was beaten fairly over the course of the season and he will now spend the winter months analyzing just how he can beat his team-mate in 2015, when you’d have to think Merc will again start off with a rather sizeable advantage.
Wonderful embrace in the pre-podium room
Source: FOM TV
6. Daniil Kvyat
It’s fair to say that not much was expected (heck, not much was known) about Daniil Kvyat when he rocked up to Melbourne. Having personally watched him spin off in the gravel at the YDT in Silverstone last season, I was stunned that he had leapfrogged both Carlos Sainz Jr and António Félix da Costa in the Red Bull pecking order. Less than a season into his debut campaign, he had already been promoted to the four-time reigning champions. Especially strong in quali, Kvyat had a tendency to drift away in races – especially in the final third of the season. Despite being comfortably outscored by Jean-Éric Vergne, he’s proved his worth and warrants a move to the senior team.

7. Felipe Massa
The only non-Mercedes (works) driver to take a pole position, Massa finishes as ‘best-of-the-rest’ in the final F1 Power Rankings of this year. To clarify, while there has been significant movement throughout the rankings, the top six were pretty much impenetrable through the second half of this season. He was shaded by Bottas through the first half of the season but finished strongly as he became more accustomed to the team. Both drivers worked well together and the stability for next season can surely only bring continued success.

8. Jenson Button
JB finishes the season eighth in the F1 Power Rankings, one of his higher placings all season after a strong season to what could yet prove to be his swansong season. He narrowly edged his rookie team-mate 10-9 in quali but, more often than not, his experience held firm on Sunday afternoons. Will he be back with McLaren next season? You’d have to think it’s unlikely. He is a known quantity to both Woking and Honda and the fact a deal hasn’t been struck yet speaks volumes. A potential question mark might be his ability to drive development of a car forward – note how McLaren stagnated when Button was paired with a less experienced team-mate. One thing is clear though, he has been treated disgracefully by McLaren if this was to be his last season.

9. Sebastian Vettel
All good things come to an end. We’ll see the return of a German driving the red #5 car next season as Seb begins the next chapter in his already illustrious career. Plagued by technical woes all season, the gap to Ricciardo slightly flatters the latter, but Vettel was beaten fair-and-square all things considered. Danke Seb.
Danke Seb!
Source: Infiniti Red Bull Racing (Facebook)
10. Fernando Alonso
Alonso just had no momentum in the closing stages to this season, culminating in a rather miserable Yas Marina finale. He also ended up being only a little bit ahead of a very lacklustre Räikkönen. One thing is certain with his move to McLaren for next season: expect the Spaniard to be battling for victories once again. Honda know the score, they have had an extra year of learning and developing their new power unit and understanding what is needed and how best to configure it.
The sun has set on Alonso's Ferrari career
Source: Scuderia Ferrari (Facebook)
11. Kevin Magnussen
You have to feel for Kevin Magnussen. By most impartial accounts, the young Dane has had a stellar debut season: scored an incredible debut podium in Melbourne and matched his world champion team-mate more often than not. Yes, there were rookie mistakes but once upon a time, Button spun off behind the Safety Car in Monza 2000. K-Mag’s aggressive driving style was also a pleasure to watch and it’s such a shame that the British media have effectively done their utmost to drive him out of the team for next season.

12. Nico Hülkenberg & 13. Sergio Pérez
The Hulk just edges out Checo to creep into the top half of these rankings. A strong final couple of races after what was otherwise a rather underwhelming second half to his season helps him to P12. The most incredible thing about Hülkenberg is that he has still yet to stand on the podium in his F1 career.

It was Pérez who took Force India’s only podium of the year in Bahrain and he could easily have stolen the victory in Canada if not for mechanical woes. The points gap between himself and Nico is slightly flattering to the German but Nico did have the edge, all things considered. Next year will be fascinating – and it could very well be the last chance both drivers have to impress a top team.

14. Kimi Räikkönen
After his stunning heroics with Lotus following his comeback to F1, this was just a plain awful season for the 2007 champ – and he’s arguably lucky not to be even lower in these standings. Lucky to have a seat for next season, things can surely only get better for the Iceman.

15. Romain Grosjean
Roll on that Mercedes power. A lost season for Grosjean as the late-starting Lotus team just never got it going. A brief stint of competitiveness at the start of the European season quickly evaporated and Grosjean and Maldonado struggled massively until Austin.

16. Jean-Éric Vergne
You could almost see the frustration in JEV threaten to boil over onto the track as he went wheel-to-wheel with his former STR team-mate Ricciardo in Abu Dhabi. The sign of a man who knows he’s done with the Red Bull program, and one who was so narrowly edged out by a three-time race winner in 2014 and then surpassed by a driver who started the year as a teenager. Vergne had copious amounts of bad luck in the first half of the season and proved to everyone what he could do in Singapore especially. A Williams test-drive looks to be on the cards and it will be desperately sad to see him disappear from Sunday racing. Judging by his 16th position in these rankings, it might not be altogether unjustified by Toro Rosso…

17. Pastor Maldonado
See Grosjean, Romain. It’s incredible to think that in Maldonado’s four-year career, he has just eight points-scoring finishes – one of those his stunning victory in Barcelona. Three seasons spent with bad machinery is atrocious luck – summed up by his move from Williams to Lotus, just as the momentum went the opposite way.

18. André Lotterer
And so we move into the depths of the paddock. The bottom seven include two drivers who made one-off appearances this season and one just one driver who will be on the grid in 2015. Lotterer rocked up and destroyed Marcus Ericsson in Spa. With none of the bottom seven having any sort of momentum, Lotterer clinches 18th on talent alone.

19. Will Stevens
Unlike Lotterer, Stevens didn’t beat his team-mate in his one-off appearances but he does make it above five regular drivers. A quietly solid debut weekend for the young Brit, who did more in one quali session than compatriot Max Chilton did in two seasons.
Will Stevens put together a solid debut weekend in difficult circumstances
Source: Caterham F1 Team (Facebook)
20. Marcus Ericsson & 21. Kamui Kobayashi
The Swede edged out Kamui Kobayashi as he has secured a seat on the grid next season. KK wishes he never came back – that says it all.

22. Max Chilton
If not for Sauber, Chilton would be rooted to the bottom. He showed nothing of note in his career.

23. Esteban Gutiérrez & 24. Adrian Sutil
Zero points. Zilch. Nada. Just an awful season for Sauber. Beaten by Marussia, who missed three races, they must hope they can secure the funding to be back next season. It’s a miracle that Sutil even lasted this long in F1, he proved once again this season that he is not worthy of this sport.

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