I accept, of course, that our opinions are neither qualified nor quantifiable. And of course there is nothing wrong with them being different either. I just wanted to go over a few things that you said, though, to clarify how I see them differently.
I think I must be missing the point, because I look at Hamilton's driving career to date and it is, without a doubt, comprehensive and complete. Most recently, his performance in GP2 was mint. I've never heard anyone say differently and give good reasons. The only thing he doesn't have is a famous racing driver for a dad or uncle. I look at Piquet this year and figure that's not really much of a loss.
I don't see that at all. Every race and every season is its own event or series of events, with its own variables. I don't think there is such a thing as "on a roll" in F1, frankly.
There are so many variables in F1 that I don't really think you'd ever be able to quantify a driver on losing streak. You can get in a naff car, that you simply can't get to work, but it is standard practice for a team to gather comprehensive telemetry and I don't think any team these days is under any illusion about where their limitations and/or bottlenecks are. A losing streak in F1, for a driver, would be simply a driver not capable of doing what's needed or just not on top of his game. I don't think you can realistically define a losing streak more granularly than a whole team as a package.
Looking at the bigger picture, there is no such thing as a F1 driver, with a drive for a year, suffering "hard times". Button is a prime example of this. He's riding the wave [man!], regardless of the fact that he hasn't managed to get into Q2 in what seems like forever. I bet you he's loving his chosen career to bits.
I dunno.. I just figure that a comprehensive discussion needs some myths about the sport to be dispelled before you can properly get to the nuts and bolts about who can and does achieve what.
I think I must be missing the point, because I look at Hamilton's driving career to date and it is, without a doubt, comprehensive and complete. Most recently, his performance in GP2 was mint. I've never heard anyone say differently and give good reasons. The only thing he doesn't have is a famous racing driver for a dad or uncle. I look at Piquet this year and figure that's not really much of a loss.
I don't see that at all. Every race and every season is its own event or series of events, with its own variables. I don't think there is such a thing as "on a roll" in F1, frankly.
There are so many variables in F1 that I don't really think you'd ever be able to quantify a driver on losing streak. You can get in a naff car, that you simply can't get to work, but it is standard practice for a team to gather comprehensive telemetry and I don't think any team these days is under any illusion about where their limitations and/or bottlenecks are. A losing streak in F1, for a driver, would be simply a driver not capable of doing what's needed or just not on top of his game. I don't think you can realistically define a losing streak more granularly than a whole team as a package.
Looking at the bigger picture, there is no such thing as a F1 driver, with a drive for a year, suffering "hard times". Button is a prime example of this. He's riding the wave [man!], regardless of the fact that he hasn't managed to get into Q2 in what seems like forever. I bet you he's loving his chosen career to bits.
I dunno.. I just figure that a comprehensive discussion needs some myths about the sport to be dispelled before you can properly get to the nuts and bolts about who can and does achieve what.