TR
Points Scorer
The season there has been plenty of media hyperbole about the red bull being the "most dominant car ever" (or similar statements). This got me thinking, can we quantify this notion? Of course, one can simply count the number of wins or the number of points scored in a season as a measure. However, I don't think this quite captures the oppressive feeling of dominance exerted by the current Red Bull, the 2014 Mercedes, or the early 2000s Ferrari. It isn't just that these cars win a lot, but how they win. Instead lets look the margin by which they win. I will look at two measures that I will refer to as the "qualifying advantage" and "race advantage".
The obtain the qualifying advantage, for each race we obtain the fastest qualifying times for the WCC of that year and the fastest competitor (in that session), and take median difference over the entire season. Taking the median will reduce the sensitivity to outliers, e.g. caused by crashing out in qualifying.
The race advantage is similar but takes the finishing times. Double DNFs essentially count as -infinity, but will have minimal impact due to taking the median.
I obtained data for the races and qualifying from this dataset (Formula 1 World Championship (1950 - 2023)) from Kaggle. Unfortunately their qualifying data is incomplete pre-2003, so there is no data in this table from before that season. The table below shows the 10 most dominant cars for qualifying:
*Date up to and including Austin 2023.
The qualifying advantage is dominated by the V6 turbo hybrid era Mercedes cars, which probably doesn't surprise anyone. This year's Red Bull shows up only in 7th place, and isn't even the most dominant Red Bull.
For the race results the dataset goes back much further. I decided to only consider data from 1980 onward. F1 prior to that was simply too different from modern F1.
*Date up to and including Austin 2023.
We now see some of the true beasts of F1 history show up like the McLaren MP4/4 and the 2002 Ferrari. This year's Red Bull now takes 8th, but is second only to the 2014 Mercedes of the cars considered for qualifying.
So, while this year's Red Bull is certainly "upper there" with some of the most dominant cars in F1 history, it cannot really by called the "most dominant". At least not based on these measures.
The obtain the qualifying advantage, for each race we obtain the fastest qualifying times for the WCC of that year and the fastest competitor (in that session), and take median difference over the entire season. Taking the median will reduce the sensitivity to outliers, e.g. caused by crashing out in qualifying.
The race advantage is similar but takes the finishing times. Double DNFs essentially count as -infinity, but will have minimal impact due to taking the median.
I obtained data for the races and qualifying from this dataset (Formula 1 World Championship (1950 - 2023)) from Kaggle. Unfortunately their qualifying data is incomplete pre-2003, so there is no data in this table from before that season. The table below shows the 10 most dominant cars for qualifying:
Year | WCC | Qualifying advantage |
2015 | Mercedes | 0.719 s |
2014 | Mercedes | 0.545 s |
2020 | Mercedes | 0.538 s |
2016 | Mercedes | 0.531 s |
2004 | Ferrari | 0.370 s |
2011 | Red Bull | 0.265 s |
2023* | Red Bull | 0.239 s |
2017 | Mercedes | 0.213 s |
2010 | Red Bull | 0.181 s |
2018 | Mercedes | 0.093 s |
The qualifying advantage is dominated by the V6 turbo hybrid era Mercedes cars, which probably doesn't surprise anyone. This year's Red Bull shows up only in 7th place, and isn't even the most dominant Red Bull.
For the race results the dataset goes back much further. I decided to only consider data from 1980 onward. F1 prior to that was simply too different from modern F1.
Year | WCC | Race advantage |
1988 | McLaren | 41.828 s |
2014 | Mercedes | 23.604 s |
1984 | McLaren | 21.784 s |
2002 | Ferrari | 17.730 s |
1992 | Williams | 17.579 s |
1986 | Williams | 16.283 s |
1996 | Williams | 15.607 s |
2023* | Red Bull | 15.290 s |
2015 | Mercedes | 14.592 s |
1987 | Williams | 12.016 s |
We now see some of the true beasts of F1 history show up like the McLaren MP4/4 and the 2002 Ferrari. This year's Red Bull now takes 8th, but is second only to the 2014 Mercedes of the cars considered for qualifying.
So, while this year's Red Bull is certainly "upper there" with some of the most dominant cars in F1 history, it cannot really by called the "most dominant". At least not based on these measures.