Seriously I don't understand the people measuring the thrills of a season only on the amount of overtake manoevers made during the year. First of all because there is overtaking and overtaking, for example the datas are gonna count the cases when a front runner would start in last positions for some reason and would begin to make his way through the field, while the backmarkers would make very little opposition. I also recall of statistics from the 2007 European GP where the 15ish positions lost by Markus Winkelhock in 1 lap were all counted as overtaking manoevers... Whereas the Spyker driver was on the lead at the restart with rain tyres while the rest of the field was on the inter, creating a difference of speed of 15-20 seconds a lap.
Monaco 1992 or Imola 2005 are two classic GPs(well, not so much yet for the latter, but it might be in a decade after Alonso and Schumacher retiring from the sport) with no overtaking moves at the front. In fact if they are it's because overtaking was a damn difficult thing to do at Monaco and Imola, and everyone was admiring Alonso's and Senna's abilities to stay in front of a 2-3 seconds faster car, and wondering if Mansell or Schumacher would eventually find a way through. Imagine if Imola or Monaco were easy tracks for overtaking, Mansell and Schumacher would have done the job within a few corners and those GPs would have been forgotten after a few weeks.
Honestly I think 2010 is a pretty much decent season to watch as we have 5 championship contenders grouped in less points than a win, that at 7 GP to go. I guess you'd have to go back to 1981 to see something similar. In the end I won't bother much if all the efforts given to provide more on-track passes kinda failed. F1 isn't all about overtaking IMO. If you'd go back to the early/mid-70s, overtaking hadn't such an importance since there was lots of difference between the cars and the reliability wasn't great at all, so people knew they could eventually win or do well without blocking the driver behind for the whole GP. And this was dangerous thing too, drivers and spectators could actually die if a manoever wouldn't go well, so people were generally giving room to each other.
Monaco 1992 or Imola 2005 are two classic GPs(well, not so much yet for the latter, but it might be in a decade after Alonso and Schumacher retiring from the sport) with no overtaking moves at the front. In fact if they are it's because overtaking was a damn difficult thing to do at Monaco and Imola, and everyone was admiring Alonso's and Senna's abilities to stay in front of a 2-3 seconds faster car, and wondering if Mansell or Schumacher would eventually find a way through. Imagine if Imola or Monaco were easy tracks for overtaking, Mansell and Schumacher would have done the job within a few corners and those GPs would have been forgotten after a few weeks.
Honestly I think 2010 is a pretty much decent season to watch as we have 5 championship contenders grouped in less points than a win, that at 7 GP to go. I guess you'd have to go back to 1981 to see something similar. In the end I won't bother much if all the efforts given to provide more on-track passes kinda failed. F1 isn't all about overtaking IMO. If you'd go back to the early/mid-70s, overtaking hadn't such an importance since there was lots of difference between the cars and the reliability wasn't great at all, so people knew they could eventually win or do well without blocking the driver behind for the whole GP. And this was dangerous thing too, drivers and spectators could actually die if a manoever wouldn't go well, so people were generally giving room to each other.