Wednesday, December 18, 2019

2019 For the Love of Indy Awards

It is a week until Christmas and pretty much every racing series is in hiatus. We all sit and wait for the next season, which will be here soon, but now is a time for reflection. This is a chance to honor the best of the year, from the stand out drivers to the orderly organizations, the passes that made us say wow to the moments that left us in tears. The 2019 calendar year gave us the best moments of motorsports but we also had some of the worst.

With this we close the 2019 season, recognizing what will be remembered for years to come.

Racer of the Year
Description: Given to the best racer over the course of 2019.
And the Nominees are:
Lewis Hamilton
Marc Márquez
Jonathan Rea
Scott McLaughlin
Nick Cassidy

And the winner is... Marc Márquez
For the third time in eight seasons it goes to the Catalan rider and this might have been his best season yet.

Márquez won the first ten races in 2014 and 13 total. In 2019, he may have not had scored the same number of victories and he may have fallen just 0.1111 points shy of matching his average points per race total from 2014 but this season was remarkable.

Let's just go through race-by-race: Second, first, retirement, first, first, second, first, second, first, first, second, second, first, first, first, first, first, second and first.

The lone retirement might be most telling of all. It came after Márquez fell from the lead at Austin, ending a streak of 12 consecutive victories in the United States, ten of which were in the premier class. Even Márquez's one mistake all season was historic.

This season was progression for Márquez. He was already great, talented beyond measure with the ability to do anything on a bike but this year we saw the savviness of Márquez take a few victories. He will haunt Fabio Quartararo's dreams for the entire offseason. Twice Márquez ripped a first career MotoGP victory away from the Frenchman, first at Misano but the second time was most painful in Buriram. While Márquez whizzed across the finish line, sealing his eighth world championship, Quartararo could only punch his bike in dismay. Both of Quartararo's hands were on the trophy and he was left holding air while Márquez sunk the eight ball in the corner pocket with hardware by his side.

Márquez was a factor in every race and even crazier is if you gave Márquez three-tenths of a second he could have a dazzling number of victories. He was second to Andrea Dovizioso by 0.023 at Qatar, second to Danilo Petrucci by 0.043 seconds at Mugello, second to Dovizioso by 0.213 seconds at Red Bull Ring and second to Álex Rins by 0.013 seconds at Silverstone. He may not have had a 16-victory season but damn it, Márquez was always a factor.

There are a few other competitors in the world of motorsports who have a stranglehold in their respective championships but no one has a grip as tight as Márquez. There was no off day for him in 2019, even with the fall in the Austin. He has redefined the limits a rider can go. For years he overstepped the boundary in practice and qualifying to perfect his craft. He had to make a mistake to improve. In 2019, those mistakes were few but he still continued to get better, faster and no one is keeping up. There is no sign of him stopping.

On the other nominees:
Lewis Hamilton was hands down the best driver in Formula One this season and easily took a sixth world championship. Hamilton scored points in every race; he won 11 of the 21 races and stood on the podium 17 times. There were a few blemishes. In Germany, he threw away a race in the wet and only got points because both Alfa Romeos received 30-second penalties for using driver aids at the start. In Brazil, he bowled into Alexander Albon and the five-second penalty knocked him down to seventh. While not perfect, Hamilton was level headed, no one got under his skin and he pulled out victories time and time again while others made mistakes around him.

Here is one awards ceremony where Jonathan Rea will be recognized. Rea's fifth World Superbike championship not only put alone for most all-time but it came from behind. Rea did not win any of the first 11 races but he was on the podium for all of them. He had only two victories in the first 16 races but in the final 21 races Rea won 15 times, was runner-up five times and his worst finish was fifth. His championship rival Álvaro Bautista could not keep up despite having his dominant start to the season. Are the records a little inflated because of the introduction of the SuperPole race? Yes but Rea was the most consistent rider and proved to beat him one may not make any mistakes.

Scott McLaughlin is quickly lifting himself up the echelon of Team Penske greats. Not only did McLaughlin win his second consecutive Supercars championship but the New Zealander broke the record for most victories in a season with 18, one of which included the Bathurst 1000. McLaughlin has 35 victories for Team Penske, now fourth all-time after starting 2019 in ninth. The only drivers to win more for Team Penske are Brad Keselowski, Mark Donohue and Rusty Wallace. Wallace will certainly be passed. If McLaughlin stays in Australia he very well could get the top spot but an IndyCar test is on his horizon and his future may be in the United States.

Nick Cassidy broke through and won the Super Formula championship on the final day of the season, reversing the results of a year earlier. In Super GT, Cassidy again finished in the vice-champion position. This New Zealander has found success in sports cars and single-seater competition. He got a taste of IMSA competition in the 24 Hours of Daytona and he made two starts in the Intercontinental GT Challenge. He is making his name in Japan but at his rate he will soon become known in many other corners of the world.

Past Winners
2012: Kyle Larson
2013: Marc Márquez
2014: Marc Márquez
2015: Nick Tandy
2016: Shane van Gisbergen
2017: Brendon Hartley
2018: Scott Dixon

Race of the Year
Description: Best Race of 2019.
And the Nominees are:
British motorcycle Grand Prix
Honda 200 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
Petit Le Mans
3 Hours of Barcelona
Super Formula at Okayama

And the winner is... Honda 200 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
Caution-free race, margin of victory of 0.093 seconds and the top three finishers started eighth, sixth and tenth... at Mid-Ohio? The race can only be described as phenomenal.

The difference in Firestone's alternate and primary tire led to a mixture of strategies. The question was when to use the alternate tire and whether to do a two stops or three. The alternate tire had speed early but faded. Combine that with two stops or three stops and it dictated who was going to be at the front and who would be fighting to just finish in the top five.

Will Power, Alexander Rossi, Josef Newgarden all committed to the two-stop strategy, starting on the alternate tire before switching to the primary. The problem is the three-stoppers stopped earlier and could get within the pit delta. Add to it many of those three-stoppers did not start on the alternate and could take it while the two-stoppers committed to the slower but more durable compound.

This led to Scott Dixon and Ryan Hunter-Reay moving to the front but the lead was Felix Rosenqvist, who was on the two-stop strategy but started on the primary before going on the alternate. While the Swede had a comfortable lead, it was slowly disappearing when the tires started to wear and the team called an audible, shorting stinting Rosenqvist, getting him off the alternate tire but maintaining his advantage in track position.

Dixon inherited the lead and to the surprise of no one Dixon was the one driver who could make the alternate tire last for the entirety of a stint. He was not dropping off at the rate of others and this split strategy allowed Chip Ganassi Racing to hold the top two spots without much pressure from the rest of the field.

The one questionable call was Dixon doubled up on the alternate tire on his final two stints while Rosenqvist and pretty much the rest of the field had the primary tire on. It worked for Dixon once but the second stint on the alternate saw more tire wear than his first stint on alternate tires and his gap started to shrink.

Rosenqvist clawed away at the difference to his teammate and benefited from lapped traffic slowing Dixon even more. It became a hunt, the predator going after its prey but knowing it could escape to safety if he is not quick enough. Rosenqvist got there but overtaking his teammate was going to be much harder. His best chance came on the final lap into the keyhole, Rosenqvist made the move on the inside and made contact with Dixon, both cars remained on the racetrack and Dixon maintained the lead.

After the failed attempted, Rosenqvist re-gathered himself and got back in Dixon's shadow hoping for one more chance to strike but each second saw less and less asphalt in front of them. Rosenqvist had one last chance for a lunge at the line but fell 0.093 seconds short. Dixon pulled off another exhilarating and masterclass Mid-Ohio victory, a victory only Dixon could have pulled off.

Meanwhile, Josef Newgarden made a similar move to Rosenqvist into the keyhole on Hunter-Reay for third only for Newgarden to spin because of the contact and end up stalled in the gravel. It was a shock to the championship. It was points lost for Newgarden on a day when it appeared he would add some insurance.

Throughout the field there were great battles with cars moving up and down the order as teams searched for the right combination of tire and fuel strategy. Each team had to do something slightly different from the rest and it led to a chaotic 90-lap event at a place many do not consider the most accommodating to great racing.

It exceeded the expectations any of us had for Mid-Ohio. Is that what we want from a race? Is that what greatness is, being better than any of us could have expected?

On the other nominees:
Silverstone provided one of the great MotoGP battles and it lasted for all 20 laps. The largest the lead ever got was 0.529 seconds at the end of lap three. That was the only lap where the lead was greater than a half-second. The largest gap between first and third was 2.888 seconds on lap seven. Marc Márquez may have led the first 18 laps from pole position but it did not go unchallenged from Álex Rins and Maverick Viñales. Rins remained on Márquez's back wheel the entire race and gave it a go on the final two laps. After a pair of unsuccessful attempts to maintain the lead, Rins made one final run up the inside exiting the final corner and beat Márquez to the line by 0.013 seconds.

For the second consecutive year, Petit Le Mans produced a thriller down to the final lap. For the second consecutive year, it had a class leader running out of fuel on the final lap and not even finishing on the podium. This time it was not for the overall victory but in the GT Daytona class, a class battle that did not let up for ten hours. Felipe Fraga ran out of fuel early on the final lap allowing Bill Auberlen, Robby Foley and Dillon Machavern to take the victory in the #94 Turner Motorsport BMW. The overall victory had drama of its own. The #5 Action Express Cadillac retired from the lead after brake failure with 30 minutes to go. Its teammate the #31 Cadillac took the lead but Felipe Nasr had the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac breathing down its neck with Jordan Taylor hoping to win in his final race for his team's team. The #31 Cadillac took the victory by 0.996 seconds.

There is nothing like a title going to the final race but in the case for the Blancpain Endurance Series and Blancpain GT Series finale it was the longest of long shots coming through. The #563 Orange1 FFF Racing Team Lamborghini entered the final race trailing the #72 SMP Racing Ferrari by 24 points with 26 points left on the table. Problems would bite the #72 Ferrari early with a flat tire dropping the team down the order. Contact with a Bentley led to a drive-through penalty. Meanwhile, the #563 Lamborghini was at the front and leading the race. A late safety car period bunched up the field in the final minutes. The #563 Lamborghini held on while the damage had been down to the #72 Ferrari and it could not get into the points. Orange1 FFF racing Team Lamborghini took the championship, which seemed nearly improbable at the start of the race.

Super Formula had introduced new tire regulations prior to the Okayama round after teams would use  a loophole and only have to use the second compound for one lap of a race either at the start or the end of the race. This led to several different strategies in Okayama but a race shaken up through multiple incidents. A lap 8 accident for Nirei Fukuzumi saw a few drivers stay out and a few drivers dive into the pit lane. Pole-sitter Ryō Hirakawa stayed out when the pit window opened on lap 11 but Kenta Yamashita led the group of drivers that had made their stop. Hirakawa led Nick Cassidy but Cassidy made an aggressive move to take the lead. The one problem was Cassidy and Hirakawa could not open a gap large enough to Yamashita. When they made their pit stop Yamashita inherited the lead while those two fell down the order. Yamashita took the victory from 16th on the grid while Cassidy made contact with Kamui Kobayashi while battling back through the field and Hirakawa dropped to 12th after a slow pit stop.

Past Winners
2012: Indianapolis 500
2013: British motorcycle Grand Prix
2014: Bathurst 1000
2015: Australian motorcycle Grand Prix
2016: Spanish Grand Prix
2017: All the races at the World Superbike/World Supersport weekend at Phillip Island
2018: Petit Le Mans

Achievement of the Year
Description: Best success by a driver, team, manufacture, etc.
And the Nominees are:
Kyle Busch reaching 208 NASCAR national touring series victories
Joe Gibbs Racing setting single-season record for most Cup victories by a team in NASCAR's modern-era
Jonathan Rea's fifth World Superbike championship
Colton Herta becoming the youngest IndyCar winner and pole-sitter
Romain Dumas breaking the Goodwood Festival of Speed record in the Volkswagen I.D. R
Scott McLaughlin's Record-Breaking Supercars Season

And the winner is... Joe Gibbs Racing setting single-season record for most Cup victories by a in NASCAR's modern-era.
Nineteen victories in 36 races. That is over 50%. There have been other great seasons in NASCAR but this has to rank very close to number one.

Not only did Joe Gibbs Racing win 19 races but it won the Daytona 500, the Coca-Cola 600 and the Southern 500. Joe Gibbs Racing had seven 1-2 finishes and four 1-2-3 finishes, including 1-2-3 finishes in the season opener at Daytona and the season finale at Homestead. The team had all four drivers win a race. The team had the driver that won the most races, the second-most races and the third-most races. Kyle Busch won the championship, Martin Truex, Jr. was second and Denny Hamlin was fourth.

There was always going to be a Joe Gibbs Racing car in contention. No other team could match that level of consistency. Team Penske started strong but could not keep up. Hendrick Motorsports is still off. Stewart-Haas Racing is just Kevin Harvick.

Joe Gibbs Racing took everything that was one the table in 2019. It was an outstanding year.

On the other nominees:
Kyle Busch's success in NASCAR's national touring divisions shows the change in the sanctioning body. NASCAR is no longer one division with 56 races a year but three divisions with each having at least two-dozen races. These are not all Cup victories but these are victories in competitive series, each with teams with dedicated crews and resources. He picked up his 200th victory at Fontana in the Cup Series and got his 201st in a Truck race at Martinsville. Busch is a driver. He wants to spend his time behind the wheel of a race car, doesn't matter what it is and he is going to find a way to win.

We touched upon Rea above but he stands alone now in World Superbike history. He has surpassed Carl Fogarty's record that had stood for 20 years. The man has been strung together five terrific seasons. He deserves all the credit in the world.

Colton Herta entered IndyCar and immediately found speed. It was not a flash in the pan. Herta's first career victory may have come with fortunate circumstances but he ran away with it when given the chance. Herta had his low points, some were out of his control, a few he played a hand in, but Herta never looked out of his elements in IndyCar. He won three pole positions and then pulled off another victory, a dominant display to close his rookie season in Laguna Seca. We have seen young drivers come to IndyCar, win early and then just be ok. Herta feels different and there feels like much more is to come.

The Goodwood Festival of Speed record was always a bit of a myth. It is an exhibition of sorts. People are not developing cars for this 1.16-mile strip of tarmac. Some take it seriously, others are there for fun and there is no grand prize for being fastest. Volkswagen had already shattered the Pikes Peak record with the I.D. R and it went to Goodwood looking to do the same. While others were there for champagne and chat, Volkswagen was there for speed and in practice broke the record with a run of 39.9 seconds, 1.7 seconds faster than Nick Heidfeld's record set in 1999 in a McLaren MP4/13. The record was going to fall at some point. No one expected it to be done like this with an all-electric vehicle. The future is here.

Like Rea, we touched on McLaughlin above. It seemed like every weekend you knew McLaughlin was going to get at least one victory. He started the season with four consecutive victories, stubbed his toe before the fifth race and then won the next two. The record had stood for 23 years, which Craig Lowndes set. McLaughlin may benefit from a bloated schedule but he the Supercars schedule has had a massive number of races for over a decade now. If it were easy the record would have been broken years ago.

Past Winners
2012: DeltaWing
2013: Sebastian Vettel for winning nine consecutive races on his way to a fourth consecutive title
2014: Marc Márquez: Setting the record for most wins in a premier class season.
2015: Justin Wilson Memorial Family Auction
2016: Jimmie Johnson for his seventh NASCAR Cup championship
2017: Jonathan Rea: For becoming the first rider to win three consecutive World Superbike championships.
2018: Robert Wickens for winning IndyCar Rookie of the Year despite missing the final three races.

Moment of the Year
Description: The Most Memorable Moment in the World of Racing during the 2019 season.
And the Nominees are:
Snow at the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
The end of the Canadian Grand Prix
Penske Purchasing Hulman & Co.
Kyle Kaiser and Juncos Racing knocking Fernando Alonso and McLaren out of the Indianapolis 500
The Belgian Grand Prix Weekend: From the start of the Formula Two race through the end of the Belgian Grand Prix.

And the winner is... a tie! Kyle Kaiser and Juncos Racing knocking out Fernando Alonso and McLaren and Penske Purchasing Hulman & Co.
We have another tie in the award show, the first time since 2013.

On the racetrack, nothing can top when the little team of Juncos Racing slain McLaren. Juncos Racing was done. Kyle Kaiser wrecked a car during Friday practice when it appeared Kaiser would have the speed to make the race. The team was reset to zero, it had to get together a backup car, a car that had previously raced at Austin and was not at all ready for the 2.5-mile oval that is Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Meanwhile, McLaren struggled to find speed. Fernando Alonso had an accident on Wednesday. The team did not have the backup car ready on Thursday because it was the wrong shade of orange. It got back on the track Friday but continued to struggle.

On Saturday, Juncos Racing continued to struggle for speed while McLaren was knocking on the door but fell 0.020 MPH short of locking Alonso into the field on Saturday.

Come Sunday, it was a six-car shootout for the final three spots between Max Chilton, Patricio O'Ward, Sage Karam, James Hinchcliffe, Alonso and Kaiser. After a lengthy detail, the session got started and while Alonso successfully qualified ahead of Chilton and O'Ward, he found himself in 33rd position with Kaiser taking to the track as the final qualifier.

A lot can happen over ten miles, the distance of a qualifying run, and Kaiser did not put a wheel wrong. He did not blink. He did not come up gasping for air. Kaiser ran four smooth laps and he completed his ten miles 0.019 MPH faster than Alonso or 0.0129 seconds faster than the Spaniard. Kaiser was in the Indianapolis 500 and Alonso was going home. The minnow had vanquished the shark. The Hail Mary was successful. Indianapolis provided another stunning result.

Nearly six months later, Indianapolis Motor Speedway was another site for news and this was of unthinkable proportions. Roger Penske had bought Hulman & Co. Roger Penske had bought Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the Indianapolis 500, IndyCar and everything else that comes with it.

For decades we have heard the rumors of the Hulman-George family selling the track but for decades it has never happened. Many possible suitors have come and gone and the track remained in the family. It never felt like the family was going to sell. Mari Hulman George had passed away but Tony George was in charge and fit the position. George's sisters were also instrumental in the facility and the grandchildren were groomed to lead the Speedway for the next few decades.

Then on one cool Monday morning in November the track released a statement about the sale. There was no speculation for days, weeks or months. There wasn't even speculation for 12 hours. There was no leaked story. There was no scrambling from the Speedway and Penske to stay on top of this. The news came, the motorsport's world jaw shatter from hitting the floor and we saw a monumental transaction play out in front of us.

Penske purchasing Hulman & Co, Indianapolis Motor Speedway and everything else is the motorsports story of the century. Nothing is going to top that in the next 81 years. The Hulman-George family had owned the track for 74 years. It seemed the family would always be there. Just like that they turned over their kingdom to the most successful man to every step onto that property.

It was fitting. It was sad. It was revolutionary. We wait and see what the rest of the 21st century has in store for the greatest racetrack in the world.

On the other nominees:
Maybe it is because Christmas is upon us but I keep thinking back to the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps back at the beginning of May. We talk about how you can experience all four seasons in a day at Spa-Francorchamps and most times that is an exaggeration but in this case it actually happened. The penultimate round of the 2018-19 FIA World Endurance Championship season had everything. Sun, rain and snow. It has snowed before at a racetrack but this was a different level. This was the highest level of sports car racing in it, LMP1 cars in it and it is a sight we may never see again. It was beautiful.

Sebastian Vettel appeared to be set for victory in Montreal before an off-track excursion and impeding Lewis Hamilton led to a five-second penalty. Vettel was irate, he could not open a five-second gap to Hamilton and at the same time he nearly backed himself up to Charles Leclerc and it could have dropped him to third. The aftermath is what will be remembered. Vettel did not drive to the podium places and simply walked back to Ferrari hospitality. He wanted nothing to do with the podium ceremony, violated all the decorum of the event and risked further penalty. Vettel started making his way to the podium but before getting there he switched the signage, moving the first place board away from the front of Hamilton's car and replacing it with the second place board. It was showmanship. Theatre. There was a tad displeasure in regulations but what we remember are the theatrics.

Unfortunately, moments are not always positive and this year some a dark moment take over the motorsports community. Anthoine Hubert lost his life in the Formula Two feature race from Spa-Francorchamps. It was a devastating loss of a promising young driver. From the start, we knew the accident was not good. We knew this was not going to be something we could move on from quickly and it was the absolute worst outcome for everyone.

The remaining Formula Two activities were cancelled and the Formula One community properly honored Hubert before the Belgian Grand Prix. In this dark moment, the motorsports community came together and paid respect to him. Our prayers continue to go out to the Hubert family and our prayers continue to go to Juan Manuel Correa, who continues to heal from injuries suffered in that accident.

This accident was a reminder that despite all the safety advancements that have been made that have protected drivers and in some cases prevented fatal injuries there is always going to be the chance of death. Sanctioning bodies will continue to work to make sure the cars are safer and make sure every man and woman that competes can step out of the cars when the checkered flag is waved.

Past Winners
2012: Alex Zanardi
2013: 24 Hours of Le Mans
2014: Post-race at the Charlotte and Texas Chase races.
2015: Matt Kenseth vs. Joey Logano
2016: Toyota Slows at Le Mans
2017: Fernando Alonso announcing his Indianapolis 500 ride
2018: Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson battle at Chicagoland

Pass of the Year
Description: Best pass of 2019.
And the Nominees are:
Simon Pagenaud on Scott Dixon for the victory in turn nine at the Grand Prix of Indianapolis
Lucas di Grassi on Pascal Wehrlein at the line of the Mexico City ePrix
Matt Campbell on Jake Dennis into the "Elbow" with 9 minutes to go in the Bathurst 12 Hour
Max Verstappen on Charles Leclerc on lap 69 of the Austrian Grand Prix
Álex Rins on Marc Márquez in the final corner at Silverstone in the British motorcycle Grand Prix

And the winner is... Álex Rins on Marc Márquez in the final corner at Silverstone in the British motorcycle Grand Prix.
This race was spectacular. Rins, Márquez and Maverick Viñales were in touch distance for most of the race. Márquez led most of it but Rins did not let him get away. He kept the pressure on and each rider had to be precise.

It became clear neither rider was going to make a mistake. Márquez was not going to throw this race away and Rins was not going let Márquez get away easy.

With two laps to go, the two Spaniards traded the lead. Rins took it from Márquez in Aintree, Márquez took it back in Brooklands. Coming to the line to start the final lap Rins retook the lead on the outside of Woodcote but lost it after running wide on the front straightaway.

It could have been game over and Márquez could have pulled away but Rins fought back and positioned himself for one final go. Rins was on Márquez's back wheel into Brooksland, ran a little wide in Luffield but got the power now, keep it close to Márquez and was able to swoop to the inside of Woodcote.

Rins was on the throttle while Márquez had to lift a tad exiting the final corner. Rins had the drive and took the victory by 0.013 seconds.

Márquez did nothing wrong. He did not botch the corner. He did not make a mistake. Rins timed a move perfectly and it was enough to get to the checkered flag in first position.

On the other nominees:
Simon Pagenaud went on a tear in the closing laps at the Grand Prix of Indianapolis and he was better than Scott Dixon in those closing laps. He made an audacious pass on Dixon in turn nine for the lead. It is a spot no one would try in the dry and Pagenaud made it stick in the wet and ran away with it.

Lucas di Grassi didn't have to make that pass on Pascal Wehrlein. Wehrlein was penalized for cutting the course and the penalty was going to drop him behind di Grassi anyway but di Grassi went for it on the racetrack and he did it in tight quarters. Wehrlein was out of energy and coasting, di Grassi forced his way through and took the checkered flag in first place, giving him the victory on the racetrack and not having to worry about getting the trophy after the assessment of penalties.

Matt Campbell had a breakout 2019 season and it all started in his homeland on arguably Australia's most famous racetrack. Campbell was going forward and it was clear he was going to factor in for the victory in the Bathurst 12 Hour. Jake Dennis did his best to keep Campbell at bay but the Australia would not be stopped and he took his chance in the tight Elbow corner on the Mount Panorama Circuit. Campbell was gone from there.

Charles Leclerc looked to be set for his first career victory in the Austrian Grand Prix but Max Verstappen put up a charge to get to the Monegasque driver. Here were two of Formula One's youngest stars battling for a race victory on a beautiful circuit. One was desperate for a breakthrough; the other was looking to continue to move himself up the driver pecking order. Verstappen made the move up the inside, a move we have seen plenty of times before and not come off but Verstappen kept it clean, took the inside and forced Leclerc to lift and run wide. Victory was for Verstappen after that worthy pass.

Past Winners
2012: Simon Pagenaud at Baltimore
2013: Robert Wickens at Nürburgring and Peter Dempsey in the Freedom 100
2014: Ryan Blaney on Germán Quiroga
2015: Laurens Vanthoor from 4th to 2nd on the outside in the Bathurst 12 Hour
2016: Scott McLaughlin on Mark Winterbottom at Surfers Paradise
2017: Renger van der Zande: From second to first on Dane Cameron at Laguna Seca
2018: Alexander Rossi for all his passes in the Indianapolis 500

The Eric Idle Award
Description: "When You're Chewing on Life's Gristle, Don't Grumble, Give a Whistle, And This'll Help Things Turn Out For The Best, and...  Always Look On The Bright Side of Life."
And the Nominees are:
James Hinchcliffe: For being dragged along by McLaren
#7 Toyota: For not changing all the tires when the car came in from the lead with a flat in the 24 Hours of Le Mans
Keating Motorsport: For its great 24 Hours of Le Mans GTE-Am victory only for disqualification for exceeding permitted fuel capacity
Jorge Lorenzo: For switching to Honda only to have a season hampered with injuries leading to retirement
Tom Blomqvist: For being kept from the 24 Hours of Daytona due to visa issues only to have his entry win the GTLM class
Kuno Wittmer: For accidentally hitting the pit speed limit button coming to the finish line in the Michelin Pilot Sports Car Challenge race at Road America and losing the race to Robin Liddell by 0.070 seconds.
Dennis Lind: For missing the final round of the Blancpain Endurance Series due to illness only for his team, the #563 Orange1 FFF Racing Team Lamborghini of Andrea Caldarelli and Marco Mapelli to win the finale and the championship.

And the winner is... Dennis Lind
Drivers lose championships all the time but to lose a championship not because you were beaten on track but because you were ill and unable to participate meanwhile your teammates win and you are not included in the record books because you could to run is painful.

There is nothing that can be done. We cannot include Lind just because he was there for the other rounds. We cannot put an asterisk. We cannot go back into time and move the race up a weekend to make sure Lind could have been there or pushed it back a week to make sure he would be returning to the racetrack after having an illness. It is done.

All we can do is be vigilant and remember Lind was there for nearly the entire championship before life caught him out and kept him from claiming a title.

On the other nominees:
James Hinchcliffe is looking for work. He was a made that seemed to be set in IndyCar, seemed to have a great home at Schmidt Peterson Motorsports and then McLaren entered. It was clear Hinchcliffe was not going to be McLaren's guy but the team dragged him on for months before sending him to the curb. Now Hinchcliffe is fighting upstream without a paddle.

The #8 Toyota got all the attention but it appeared the #7 Toyota of Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López would get its day at Le Mans after being second fiddle for so long. The team should have pulled off a victory. It was the better car and a flat tire happens but the team mishandled it. It did not cover all the bases and sent a car out without changing the flat. From there, the #7 Toyota was done. The #8 Toyota got its second consecutive Le Mans victory, the #7 Toyota had to settle for second fiddle again.

Keating Motorsport took a popular victory. The first, and what seems to be the only, customer Ford GT program took a Le Mans victory. It was a fitting end to the Ford GT program. Days later the violation became public, the victory was stripped and Ben Keating handled it with class. Keating did not go about kicking and screaming. He was very professional through it all.

Jorge Lorenzo seemed to be given another chance at MotoGP success when moving to Honda after having a slight resurgence the year prior at Ducati. However, Lorenzo struggled with pace, got injured again and then Lorenzo announced he was walking away. Lorenzo started the decade joining Yamaha, pushing Valentino Rossi to the limit before sending Rossi to Ducati and was one of the best of the 2010s. His career is ending sooner than many of us would have predicted. It is sad to see it end so soon.

Tom Blomqvist is not the first driver to be kept from racing due to visa issues, he wasn't the only other driver kept from the 2019 24 Hours of Daytona. Mike Conway could not make it to Daytona because of visa issues. Conway's team didn't win its class at the 24 Hours of Daytona. BMW was not favored to win at Daytona. If the rain didn't come or if the race had not gone through all the caution periods and red flags Blomqvist might not be ruing this day. The way everything played out what would have been Blomqvist's entry was leading the GTLM class when the checkered flag ended the race. It was the only victory for the #25 BMW all season. Ouch!

Kuno Wittmer simply made a mistake at the wrong time. It wasn't showboating, it wasn't ego coming out and costing him, it was a simply mistake. Wittmer is a talented driver but he is human and his mistake came at the worst time. I do have to give credit to Robin Liddell because he was fourth entering Canada Corner on that lap and won the race. Liddell does deserve credit for putting himself in that position.

Past Winners
2012: Ben Spies
2013: Sam Hornish, Jr.
2014: Alexander Rossi
2015: McLaren
2016: Toyota
2017: Nick Heidfeld
2018: Brett Moffitt

Comeback of the Year
Description: The Best Comeback in the 2019 season.
And the Nominees are:
Takuma Sato: For all that went wrong at Pocono, falling two laps down at Gateway only to rally and take a surprise victory.
Sebastian Vettel: From 20th to second in the German Grand Prix.
MotoE: For getting to the grid after fire destroyed every motorcycle prior to the first round of the season
Robert Kubica: For returning to the grid of a grand prix and scoring one point driving for Williams F1.
Dempsey-Proton Racing: For losing every point after a technical infringement halfway through the championship only to win three of the final four races and finishing second in the Endurance Trophy for GTE-Am Drivers

And the winner is... MotoE: For getting to the grid after fire destroyed every motorcycle prior to the first round of the season
MotoE nearly died before it could ever get started.

The teams had concluded a test day from Jerez and everything was on course for the series to debut at  the Spanish Grand Prix held at Jerez in May.

Shortly after midnight, a short circuit set the facility housing all the bikes into flames, destroying everything.

In this developing time period when electric forms of transportation and race vehicles are emerging this was a catastrophic blow to the series. It seemed the series was gone. The dream of a 2019 debut was ash in Andalusia.

However, there is an incredible resolve in human beings when faced with adversity. Yes, this is just a motorsports series, there are far greater travesties in the world than this motorsports series that need to be taken care of but this was the livelihood for many people from mechanics to riders to marketing people to truck drivers. A lot of people could have been sent to the curb if MotoE did not take place in 2019.

There would have been good reason if no season happened but the series re-grouped. The season opener at Jerez and the second round at Le Mans were cancelled. The season would open in Germany, race in Austria, have a doubleheader in Misano and a doubleheader in Valencia would make up for the lost rounds in Jerez and Le Mans.

Just over four months after the fire, the first MotoE race when green at the Sachsenring. All four rounds and six races of the inaugural season were held and Matteo Ferrari was the inaugural champion. The grid for the 2020 season was just released.

This is an incredible story, one we have not talked about enough and one deserves much more recognition than it has gotten. It is a small series. It is still learning to crawl and is not quite ready to walk but the fact it is crawling at all is something to celebrate.

On the other nominees:
Takuma Sato's week leading up to Gateway was difficult. Sato got a lot of criticism for his driving the week before at Pocono. It did not help that he started fifth in this race and then walked up the racetrack and nearly took out four cars again on the opening lap. Add to it that he quickly fell to the back and lost a lap but cautions fell his way. He got waved around and then gambled, stretching his fuel as long as he could and then another caution came. This cycle Sato to the lead and he trapped most of the field a lap down. He needed one clean stint and had to hold off a charging Ed Carpenter for the victory but he got it a week after many had torched him.

Sebastian Vettel was not having a great home weekend. Vettel had to start at the back after a turbo issue. Ferrari was having a poor weekend but in the wet-to-dry conditions, Vettel drove a smart race. He didn't push it over the limit while many in front of him did. When the checkered flag came, Vettel was second; an impressive drive after a weekend had taken a turn for the worst on Saturday.

Robert Kubica's Formula One career appeared over after a rally accident in 2011. Kubica came back to racing, running in more rallies and some sports cars but Formula One seemed to be something that was too far out there for him to achieve. The results were not great. The Williams entry was never going to produce much but Kubica returned, ran all 21 races and scored a point, with some help from Alfa Romeo penalties, but he still did it. Kubica may not have returned to where was when he last raced in Formula One nine years ago but just making it back and doing it is an achievement in itself.

We need to be clear, Dempsey-Proton Racing cheated. It manipulated the data for re-fueling time. It was guilty. However, the team rallied and this goes back to Matt Campbell. Campbell carried this entry but he was also paired with Christian Ried, who has been one of the best amateur drivers for years, and Julian Andlauer, another up-and-comer. The team did something wrong but the drivers were remarkable and to get to second in the championship, to have still have a shot at the championship entering the finale despite being reset to zero points with four races to go deserves acknowledgement.

Past Winners
2013: Michael Shank Racing at the 24 Hours of Daytona
2014: Juan Pablo Montoya to IndyCar
2015: Kyle Busch
2016: Max Verstappen from 15th to 3rd in the final 18 laps in the wet in the Brazilian Grand Prix
2017: Kelvin van der Linde: From third to first after a botched pit stop in the final 20 minutes in the 24 Hours Nürburgring
2018: Billy Monger: Returning to racing after losing his legs and finishing sixth in the BRDC British Formula 3 Championship with four podium finishes and a pole position at Donington Park.

Most Improved
Description: Racer, Team or Manufacture Who Improved The Most from 2018 to 2019.
And the Nominees are:
Álex Márquez: From fourth with no victories and six podium finishes in Moto2 to Moto2 champion with five victories and ten podium finishes.
Denny Hamlin: From 11th in the championship with no victories and 10 top five finishes to fourth in the championship with six victories, including the Daytona 500, and 19 top five finishes.
Nico Müller: From tenth on 96 points and two podium finishes to second on 250 points with three victories, 11 podium finishes and scored points in 16 of 18 races.
Cooper Webb: From ninth in Supercross on 181 points to Supercross champion with 379 points with seven victories after only two podium finishes in his prior two seasons in the 450cc class.
Mazda Team Joest: From fourth in the DPi manufactures' championship with three podium finishes with the entries finishing eighth and tenth in the championship to third the DPi manufactures' championship with three victories, eight podium finishes including two 1-2 finishes and having its entires finishing fifth and sixth in the championship.

And the winner is... Cooper Webb
Anytime you can go from afterthought to champion it has been a great year.

For two seasons, Cooper Webb showed speed but inconsistency. He threw away many good races. He could get a great jump but could not turn it into a complete A-Main.

A switch flipped in 2019. Maybe the switch to KTM had something to do with it but after the success of Ryan Dungey and the presence of Marvin Musquin at the sharp end of the field it appeared Webb was going to be the number two ride in the team. However, Webb won a race and then another and then was in the championship lead and nobody really could mount a challenge.

Musquin could not answer his teammate's pace. Eli Tomac had been the best rider in Supercross the previous few seasons but could not put together a season worthy to take the title. In 2019, Tomac was far from his previous self. He was not in the discussion. Defending champion Jason Anderson was hurt. Ken Roczen returned from injury, was running well but could not breakthrough for a victory.

Meanwhile, Webb was crisp. He did not make mistakes. He did not fall while leading three minutes into an A-Main. He didn't put himself in vicarious situations. He was smart, smooth and ended up taking a surprising championship in his debut season with KTM.

On the other nominees:
Álex Márquez was kind of being undersold after last season. It is hard to succeed when you are constantly compared to an older sibling and one that is actively achieving great things. It didn't seem like Álex Márquez was anywhere near MotoGP at the start of 2019. However, he put together a world championship season, stood out above the rest of the Moto2 grid and he will join his brother Marc with Honda in MotoGP next year.

We were ready for 2019 to be the final year for Denny Hamlin at Joe Gibbs Racing. It seemed like his time was up after a winless season in 2018. There was no reason to expect a grand turnaround but it happened. It started with an emotional victory at the Daytona 500 and five more victories followed. Hamlin went from afterthought to championship-contender. When put into a must-win situation at Phoenix, Hamlin pulled it out. The season did not end in a championship but Hamlin saved his career.

Prior to 2019, Nico Müller had run five seasons in Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters. He had one victory and seven podium finishes in his first 84 races, his best championship finish was ninth and the most points he scored in a season was 96. In 2019 alone, Müller picked up three victories, more than doubled his podium finishes and scored 250 points after having scored a combined 301 points in his first five seasons. Not bad from Müller.

Mazda Team Joest was a feel-good story of 2019. We have seen the Mazda prototype program struggle for years. A lot of good people put in a lot of hard work but the results were not coming. Mazda had some good days but lost them but 2019 was different. Mazda had its breakthrough, won three consecutive races and you could not feel anything but happy for this group.

Past Winners
2012: Esteban Guerrieri
2013: Marco Andretti
2014: Chaz Mostert
2015: Graham Rahal
2016: Simon Pagenaud
2017: DJR Team Penske
2018: Gary Paffett

And there you have it. Congratulations to all the champions, race winners and award recipients from this season. While motorsports is taking some time off remember this is a time to spend with the people we love, family, friends, and colleagues. Enjoy these days. Do not worry too much about missing motorsports. There are things more important that it. Motorsports will return but make the most of the time you have been given with those you love.

Predictions will be coming in the next few days and will be spread out until the end of the year. We will have our annual Christmas list come out next week. I thank everyone who takes the time to read what I post. There are many things out there to view and it is an honor you choose to read this. More is to come in 2020.


Tuesday, December 17, 2019

2019 Et Cetera Predictions: Revisited

With the 2019 World Touring Cup Championship concluding we can now look back at the predictions made for a dozen series for the 2019 season. This set of predictions look at two-wheels to four, GT3 to open wheel, regional to world championships and everywhere in-between.

How will 2019 end? Let's find out.

1. MotoGP: At least three manufactures have multiple race winners
Wrong! The only manufacture to produce multiple race winners was Ducati with Andrea Dovizioso and Danilo Petrucci.

Marc Márquez kicked tail this season and in doing so we did not see an abundance of race winners, which we thought would be possible. Márquez won 12 of 19 races and no other Honda rider took a victory in 2019. Maverick Viñales won at Assen and Sepang, he was the only Yamaha winner although Fabio Quartararo did his best to get a victory. Álex Rins won at Austin and Silverstone and he was the only Suzuki winner in 2019.

I put this down to Márquez being exceptional in 2019. No one could match him. On top of that, no other Honda rider could come close to him. Jorge Lorenzo continued to battle injuries and ultimately decided to retire. Cal Crutchlow did well on a customer bike but he is no Marc Márquez. Takaaki Nakagami did well but was never going to win a race.

On the other manufactures, Quartararo probably should have won at lest two or three races but Márquez continued to find a way to best the Frenchman, whether it was by pure speed or pure whit. Joan Mir was not close to his Suzuki teammate Rins. KTM was getting better but has to be competing for podium finishes before we can talk about multiple riders for victories. Aprilia is still out there but is in the same boat as KTM.

This season was a tad surprising but after running through it the lack of winners makes sense. 

2. Indy Lights: Three continents produce race winners
Wrong! The only continents to produce race winners were North America and Europe.

The North American winners were Canadian Zachary Claman and Americans Oliver Askew, Robert Megennis, Ryan Norman and Aaron Telitz.

The European winners were Dutchman Rinus Veekay and Briton Toby Sowery.

The only driver to compete that was not from North America or Europe was Brazilian Lucas Kohl, who was eighth in the championship out of eight full-time participants and he did not pick up a top five finish all season.

3. Supercars: There will be first-time winners in at least two of the three endurance rounds
Wrong! While Scott McLaughlin and Alexandre Prémat each picked up their first career Bathurst 1000 victory, the Gold Coast 600 and Sandown 500 each had repeat winners.

Jaime Whincup and Craig Lowndes won the first Gold Coast race, their sixth and second victory respectively in that event. Their teammates Shane van Gisbergen and Garth Tander won the second Gold Coast race, giving them four and two Gold Coast victories respectively.

At Sandown, Whincup and Lowndes took the victory giving Lowndes six Sandown victories, tying Allan Moffat for second all-time in Sandown history and Whincup picked up his fifth Sandown victory.

The closer first-time winner in each race was Cameron Waters and Michael Caruso in fourth of the first Gold Coast race, in the second Gold Coast race it was Luke Youlden, who was David Reynolds co-driver and at Sandown it was runner-up finishers Chaz Mostert and James Moffat.

4. World Superbike: At least two riders with new teams win a race
Wrong! Álvaro Bautista entered World Superbike with Ducati and proceeded to win the first 11 races but Bautista was the only rider with a new team to win a race in 2019.

Jonathan Rea went on his tear, matched the single-season victory record again and won another championship despite Bautista's early dominance. Chaz Davies picked up a victory for Ducati. Michael van der Mark picked up a victory for Yamaha. Toprak Razgatlioglu won two races for his Kawasaki team but all these riders were with the same time they rode for in 2018.

The newcomers could not breakthrough. This prediction may come true in 2020 with Razgatlioglu joining van der Mark at Yamaha, Bautista is moving to Honda, Scott Redding is replacing Bautista at Ducati, Alex Lowes is joining Rea at Kawasaki with Leon Haslam leaving Kawasaki to join Bautista at Honda and Javier Forés is replacing Razgatlioglu at Kawasaki Puccetti Racing.

It appears this prediction came one season too early. 

5. World Supersport: Yamaha has fewer than 75% of total podium finishes
Wrong! Yamaha had exactly 75% of the total podium finishes in 2019.

Lucas Mahias had six podium finishes, all in the final six races, for Kawasaki. Raffaele De Rosa had two podium finishes for MV Agusta. Ayrton Badovini had one podium finish for Kawasaki.

This prediction was one podium finish for a non-Yamaha rider away from being correct. 

6. Blancpain GT: The Spa 24 Hours winner wins one of the three Blancpain GT championships
Wrong! The #20 GPX Racing Porsche of Kévin Estre, Richard Leitz and Michael Christensen won the 24 Hours of Spa and the #563 Orange1 FFF Racing Lamborghini of Andrea Caldarelli and Marco Mapelli swept the Blancpain GT championship.

7. Asian Le Mans Series: One of the three class champions go to Le Mans and finish in the top six in class
Correct! The #22 United Autosport Ligier-Gibson won the 2018-19 Asian Le Mans Series LMP2 championship and then went on to finish fourth in class at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

And to cover this prediction twice the #57 CarGuy Racing Ferrari swept all four races to take the Asian Le Mans Series GT championship and then went to Le Mans and finished fifth in the GTE-AM class.

Great job out of the Asian Le Mans Series representatives.

8. Super Formula: There are at least three winners under the age of 30
Correct! There were seven different winners in the seven Super Formula races in 2019 and four were under the age of 30. Those drivers were (age at time of victory) 24-year-old Nick Cassidy, 22-year-old Álex Palou, 25-year-old Ryō Hirakawa and 24-year-old Kenta Yamashita.

The other winners were 31-year-old Yuhi Sekiguchi, 30-year-old Naoki Yamamoto and 30-year-old Tomoki Nojiri, who had turned 30 years old just six weeks prior to his victory at Suzuka.

9. Super GT: We do not see a DTM crossover event or entry during the season
Wrong! We not only had a crossover event but Super GT teams participated in the DTM finale at Hockenheim. Jenson Button represented Honda in the Hockenheim round with Nissan sending over Ronnie Quintarelli and Tsugio Matsuda and Lexus sending Nick Cassidy and Ryō Hirakawa.

The Super GT x DTM Dream Race was held on November 23rd and 24th and 22 cars participated with Audi and BMW each sending three entries. BMW had Kamui Kobayashi, Alex Zanardi and Marco Wittmann as its representatives. Audi sent Benoît Tréluyer, Loïc Duval and Mike Rockenfeller to Japan.

I am glad this prediction was wrong and I am excited for more Super GT/DTM crossover events but I am weary abut how many of these events we can see. It cost a lot of money to send cars from Germany to Japan and vice versa. I hope this is more than just a one-year thing that quickly fizzled out due to logistics.

10. DTM: Aston Martin has fewer drivers in the top ten of the championship than BMW in 2012
Correct! In 2012, BMW had four drivers in the top ten of the championship. In 2019, Aston Martin had zero drivers in the top ten of championship with its drivers finishing 14th, 16th, 17th and 18th.

And Aston Martin will be leaving DTM after one season, which is not good for a series that only had 18 cars to begin with. I didn't expect Aston Martin to enter and compete for race victories in year one but I expected it to be better than it was.

It is back to the drawing board for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters.

11. World Touring Car Cup: The average age of the top three in the championship is at least ten years lower than 2018
Wrong! Yvan Muller is to blame. The 50-year-old was third in the championship, combine that with champion Norbert Michelisz at 35 years old, who won the first race over the weekend from Sepang, and Esteban Guerrieri at 34 years old, who won the second Sepang race, and the average age of the top three was 39.667 years, only 6.333 years younger than last year's top three.

Thed Björk was fourth in the championship and at 38 years old he would have made the average age of the top three 35.666 years, which would have been enough to fulfill this prediction but he finished 34 points behind Muller.

Twenty-three year old Mikel Azcona had runner-up finishes in the final two races of the season but that could only lift the Spaniard to fifth in the championship, 75 points off Muller in third.

Johan Kristoffersson won the final race of the season from Sepang but the 31-year-old entered the Sepang weekend 11th in the championship and his victory combined with a seventh and a third lifted him to sixth in the championship. Muller's 23-year-old nephew Yann Ehrlacher ended up eighth in the championship, losing three spots over the final weekend.

Nicky Catsburg and Augusto Farfus were both outside the top ten in the championship.

The younger drivers did well but not well enough for this prediction.

12. WRC: Citroën moves up at least two positions in the manufactures' championship and wins at least four rounds including one of the first five
Wrong! Citroën moved up only one spot in the manufactures' championship, won only three rounds but it did win two of the first three rounds so that last part was correct but the other two parts cancel that out.

We are ending on a downer, my worst set of predictions yet, three out of 12. That is terrible. A few of these just needed one thing to go right. One more different winner in World Superbike, one more podium for Kawasaki in World Supersport, Indy Lights being able to draw a quality driver from South America, a Millennial doing something worth a damn in World Touring Car Cup and then we are looking at more predictions correct than not but none of that was the case and we will head into 2020 hoping to do much better.



Monday, December 16, 2019

2019 Sports Car Predictions: Revisited

We have looked back at three predictions for 2019. Today, we will look at our fourth set of predictions for the year and it is the sports car predictions.

The sports car season has concluded now that the 8 Hours of Bahrain has been completed and the forgotten Gulf 12 Hours. Sports car racing is one season that never seems to end. We will take three weekends off and then the Dubai 24 Hours will be upon us. Not long after that will be the 24 Hours of Daytona. The week after that is the Bathurst 12 Hour. The season never ends and there is always a big event around the corner. It keeps us busy.

My IndyCar, Formula One and NASCAR predictions were not great this year. Let's see how these turned out.

1. IMSA: Japanese manufactures win at least half the races overall (excluding the GT-only races)
Correct! Japanese manufactures won six of ten races overall. Acura won three races, Mid-Ohio, Belle Isle and Laguna Seca. Mazda won three consecutive races from Watkins Glen to Mosport to Road America.

Acura took the manufactures' championship and the #6 Team Penske Acura of Dane Cameron and Juan Pablo Montoya won the drivers' title. That felt right but I also feel Acura under-performed slightly. The #7 Acura of Ricky Taylor and Hélio Castroneves did not win a race but had five podium finishes. I would have put Acura down for four victories with either Mazda or Nissan picking up the fifth to turn this prediction into a success but it was more even than I expected.

Mazda had a few poor races but it was not the same old issues with Mazda. Daytona and Sebring did not go Mazda's way but it pushed Acura at Mid-Ohio and then had a summer tear that made everyone smile. If it weren't for those two rough results to start the season and a tough weekend at Belle Isle, Mazda could have been in the title fight.

Nissan did not have a great year switching over to CORE Autosport. The team never got on the podium and CORE Autosport is closing down its DPi program, meaning Nissan will exit the series.

To add more sad news on the back of the Nissan departure is Mazda will be splitting with Team Joest after Sebring in 2020 with no announced plans for if anyone will pick up the program for the rest of the season, although there is hope Dyson Racing could return and run a customer Mazda.

Losing both manufactures would be a sad loss for the DPi class. Let's hope Mazda can find a way to keep at least one car on the grid.

2. The GTLM champion has at least three victories
Correct! The #912 Porsche of Earl Bamber and Laurens Vanthoor won the GTLM championship and the #912 Porsche did it with victories at Long Beach, Mid-Ohio and Mosport.

Porsche dominated GTLM in 2019 in a subtle way. It won six of 11 races, including four consecutive at one point, and took the top two in the championship and locked it all up with a race to go, but it was not a thrashing.

BMW started the season with a surprise victory in the 24 Hours of Daytona, aided because of the rain, Ford won three races in its final season and Ferrari took an unexpected victory at Petit Le Mans. Corvette was shut out.

I do not expect Corvette to be shut out again in 2020 but it would not be crazy to think Porsche successfully defends this title.

3. GTD has its fourth different manufactures' champion in four years
Wrong! Lamborghini successfully defended its title and won by two points over Acura.

The #86 Meyer Shank Racing Acura of Dominik Farnbacher and Trent Hindman won the drivers' championship but Lamborghini had some aid in the manufactures' championship thanks to Grasser Racing Team winning the first two races at Daytona and Sebring, the only two races the team competed in.

With that said, Magnus Racing did a respectable job and Paul Miller Racing won a race, carrying Lamborghini to the title. On top of that, Porsche was third in the championship, three points off Lamborghini and Turner Motorsport was second in the drivers' championship with Bill Auberlen and Robby Foley with two victories but BMW was a distant fourth in the manufacture's championship.

The GT Daytona class was fantastic to follow in 2019.

4. WEC: The #8 Toyota wins the world championship
Correct! Fernando Alonso, Sébastien Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima took the title, won all three races in the 2019 portion of the season and capped it off with a second consecutive 24 Hours of Le Mans victory.

This was never in doubt. The only serious contender was the #7 Toyota and the sister car did put up a fight but something went wrong in each of the final three races. Something broke at Sebring and Spa-Francorchamps and the team screwed up changing a flat tire at Le Mans.

The #8 Toyota took the title because it had speed and made fewer mistakes. Alonso, Buemi and Nakajima deserve all the credit in the world but that should not take away from what Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López did. The title was not lost for the #7 Toyota due to driver error.

5. Porsche does not win majority of the remaining races in GTE-Am
Wrong! Porsche swept the remaining GTE-Am races. Ferrari was shut out for the season. Aston Martin was shut out from the season opener onward. It was complete domination for Porsche in the class.

Dempsey-Proton Racing rebounded to win two of the final three races after it had its championship score was erased following the Fuji round after a data breach was found allowing the team to manipulate refueling times. Team Project 1 won the finale at Le Mans and clinched the class championship for Jörg Bergmeister, Patrick Lindsey and Egidio Perfetti.

However, the start of the 2019-20 season has seen Ferrari and Aston Martin take the first three races. Porsche did get back on the board with Team Project 1 and the line-up of Ben Keating, Jeroen Bleekemolen and Larry ten Voorde at Bahrain but how quickly things change.

6. At least one new team wins in LMP2
Correct! DragonSpeed won the penultimate round of the 2018-19 season at Spa-Francorchamps with Anthony Davidson, Roberto González and Pastor Maldonado.

In fact, the first three races of the 2019-20 season have seen three winners in LMP2 that did not win in the class last season with Cool Racing winning the season opener, Racing Team Nederland winning at Fuji, Jota Sport taking victory at Shanghai and United Autosport won at Bahrain. Once again, how quickly things change.

7. ELMS: Drivers with Formula One starts win fewer races overall in 2019
Correct! Only one of the European Le Mans Series races in 2019 had an overall winner that had start a Formula One race.

It was Jean-Éric Vergne again with G-Drive Racing but for a class that saw Paul di Resta (albeit it for one race), Will Stevens and Bruno Senna, Vergne was the only Formula One-experienced driver to take a victory.

8. At least one of the top three championship finishers in LMP3 improve by at least three spots in the championship
Correct! The #11 Eurointernational Ligier-Nissan won the championship after finishing seventh the year before and the #17 Ultimate Norma M30-Nissan jumped up from eighth to third in the championship.

For the second consecutive season, the #13 Inter EuroPol Competition Ligier-Nissan was vice-champion in the LMP3 championship. This year was a little more painful for Inter EuroPol Competition, as Inter EuroPol Competition crossed the finish line as champions but lost it due to a penalty for a drive-time infringement.

9. At least one race has a manufacture sweep the podium in GTE
Correct! Ferrari swept the podium at Barcelona; in fact the manufacture took the top four spots. That was the only manufacture sweep of the season in the GTE class.

10. World Challenge America: American drivers win more races overall in 2019 than 2018
Correct! Only one race had an American winner in 2018. Two races had an American winner in 2019.

The first race to have an American winner was the second Sonoma race with Patrick Long and Canadian Scott Hargrove. The second race was the second Road America race with Dane Cameron and Mike Hedlund taking the overall victory as a Pro-Am combination.

11. One of the regional GT4 series averages fewer than ten entries
Correct! The GT4 West championship averaged 8.8 entries over its five rounds and only broke double-figures twice, having ten entries at Laguna Seca and Portland.

The GT4 East championship did average 11 entries per five rounds with 15 cars showing up for the first round at Austin and every round having at least nine entries.

12. There will be at least one occasion I forget about this series and do not put it in the "Coming Up This Weekend" section of a Musings From the Weekend
Wrong! I got the series each time but I think we need to talk about Blancpain GT World Challenge America for a moment.

The series is changing. It is going to be a Pro-Am series in 2020. The series went back-and-forth on whether or not the season would open in Austin at the start of March and it finally decided it would. It does not have the same grab that Pirelli World Challenge had a few years ago and that stinks but the series is also trying to survive.

It doesn't run as many companion weekends with IndyCar as it once did but it has to do what is best for the series itself. It has a few notable names in it but the level of manufacture participation is down a tad. Bentley and Ferrari dominated in 2019. Porsche and Acura each won a race and Mercedes was out there but it wasn't long ago you had Cadillac, Audi, McLaren and Lamborghini winning in this series alongside the four manufactures that won in 2019.

I hate to say it but it is not appointment viewing like it once was. A few years ago, if I could not catch PWC live I would go back and catch the replay. I will be honest; I may have watched one or two races this year. Part of it is time, you cannot watch everything, but another part of it is this series does not have the same pizzazz it had not long ago.

I hope that changes but I do not envision it. It needs something to draw me in and a Pro-Am series could be good but there could be something that is constantly lacking. Hopefully I am wrong.

Eight out of 12, now that is more like it.


Thursday, December 12, 2019

2019-20 IndyCar Silly Season Catch-Up

We have less than a fortnight until Christmas and we have still not even reached the halfway point of the IndyCar offseason. In fact, the halfway point is exactly a week away.

This has been an eventful IndyCar offseason despite not even being halfway over. Nothing really pointed to this much movement when the trucks were packed and pulled out of Laguna Seca to end the season and drive east into the autumnal air. Not long ago it seemed to be the norm to head into an offseason knowing there would be a lot of movement. It was just how it was during the rough days of Champ Car and the Indy Racing League.

Maybe we got too comfortable with consistency. Maybe things have improved in IndyCar where stability is possible for a few seasons but turnover will come again and most of it will happen at once. Maybe this has been a natural cycle for the series and we were due for an offseason that mixes everything up.

Either way, we kind of need to get our heads around what has happened, who has moved, who has stayed and what is still undetermined as Christmas approaches and IndyCar crests the offseason peak.

Who Has Stayed Put?
Andretti Autosport has retained all four drivers, Alexander Rossi, Ryan Hunter-Reay, Zach Veach and Marco Andretti. The Andretti Autosport family has also brought Colton Herta into the fold with the team absorbing the Harding Steinbrenner Racing operation.

Chip Ganassi Racing has kept Scott Dixon and Felix Rosenqvist. This will be their 19th and second respectively seasons with the team.

Graham Rahal and Takuma Sato will be back in a two-car operation for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing.

Meyer Shank Racing has become a full-time team and Jack Harvey will get an opportunity at a full season. This year the team will run with a technical alliance from Andretti Autosport.

Ed Carpenter has decided to keep Ed Carpenter around for the oval races in the #20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet.

Team Penske is going to keep 2019 championship Josef Newgarden, 2019 Indianapolis 500 winner Simon Pagenaud and the driver that won the most races in the 2010s decade Will Power for the 2020 season.

Fourteen driver/team combinations will carry over from the 2019 season to 2020.

Who is Gone? 
The notable news of the offseason was McLaren and Schmidt Peterson marriage kicking James Hinchcliffe and Marcus Ericsson to the curb. The McLaren/Schmidt Peterson team has also switched from Honda to Chevrolet engines for the 2020 season.

Dale Coyne Racing parted ways with Sébastien Bourdais despite Bourdais being the top Dale Coyne Racing driver in the championship in 2019.

Spencer Pigot was let go from the full-time seat, the #21 Chevrolet, at Ed Carpenter Racing. Speaking of Ed Carpenter Racing, Ed Jones will not return in the #20 Chevrolet for the road and street course races.

Who Has Found a New Home?
The good news for Marcus Ericsson is he quickly found a new home at Chip Ganssi Racing, an operation that will expand to three cars.

Conor Daly will share the #20 Chevrolet will Ed Carpenter in 2020. Daly will do the 12 road and street course events and Daly will be in a third car for the Indianapolis 500. While Daly will be part-time, Rinus VeeKay has taken over the full-time seat, the #21 Chevrolet for ECR.

McLaren and Schmidt Peterson have hired Patricio O'Ward and Oliver Askew to fill its two full-time entries. This comes after O'Ward ran seven races in 2019 before his responsibilities as a Red Bull junior driver took him to Japan for a few rounds in Super Formula. O'Ward has been released from the Red Bull junior program. Askew will move up fresh off winning the Indy Lights championship last year.

As of now, we have 18 confirmed entries for the 2020 season.

Who Has Been Silent?
A.J. Foyt Racing has not said much since the cars were last on track at Laguna Seca.

The Foyt team has seen primary sponsor ABC Supply Co. exit and there has been little said about what that team will do in 2020. When the news broke of Foyt's team losing its sponsor the team stated it still planned on running two cars. There has been no word on whether Tony Kanaan and/or Matheus Leist will return or not.

Carlin ran six drivers in two cars last year and not much has come out from that camp. Two of the drivers the team ran in 2019 have already picked up rides for 2020 in Daly and O'Ward. The other four drivers for the team, Max Chilton, Charlie Kimball, RC Enerson and Sage Karam have not confirmed any plans for 2020.

Dale Coyne Racing has not confirmed that Santino Ferrucci will be back for 2020. Everyone seems to believe these two will be together for another season but no one has said it is done and dusted.

We have not heard anything from part-time competitors in 2019, Juncos Racing and DragonSpeed, about potential 2020 programs.

Obligatory Too Early Indianapolis 500 Entry List Count
Right now we are at 18 known full-time entries, add Conor Daly and we are already at 19 car. If Carlin, Foyt and Coyne all return with at least two cars we have 25 entries, split between 13 Honda teams and 12 Chevrolet teams.

It has been really quiet on Indianapolis 500 programs this offseason. In recent seasons we have known of a few additional entries for the Indianapolis 500-only at this time of the year.

The biggest fish out there is Fernando Alonso and the Spaniard could be changing his scenery for 2020. Alonso reportedly has been in talks to run with Andretti Autosport for the 2020 Indianapolis 500. Alonso ran for the team in 2017 when McLaren formed a partnership with Andretti Autosport for the month of May. Last year, Alonso missed the field in a McLaren entry with some relation to the Carlin program.

Alonso will be at Indianapolis in May, at least it appears that way. If Alonso is in an Andretti car, that takes up the additional Andretti entry we are used to seeing. If Alonso is running with McLaren then we will still probably see an additional Andretti car with another driver.

I think people were penciling in a third McLaren but if Alonso chooses to race elsewhere I am not so certain a third entry is a slam-dunk. Last season, McLaren couldn't get one car in the field with a partnership with a full-time team. In 2020, McLaren will be on its own and with two full-time cars. It might make more sense to focus on getting those two cars with two drivers that have never qualified for the Indianapolis 500 into the race than splitting the deck and having a third driver also trying to get in.

It would not surprise me if McLaren has a third entry with a driver that is not Alonso, especially since Schmidt Peterson Motorsports ran an extra car on a regular basis at Indianapolis, but I think there is a chance the team sticks to two cars.

Because there has been so little news on full-time entries, it is hard to figure out what team would run an additional car and what teams will not.

A.J. Foyt Racing has been a team you could consistently count on to run an extra car but if the team only runs one full-time car then that is one few Indianapolis 500 entry than if it was a two-car team full-time. The same goes with Dale Coyne Racing. Coyne has a record of running two full-time teams but if the team cannot find a suitable driver for the second car then maybe the team doesn't run a third car at Indianapolis. Carlin entered three cars last year and only one made the field. Would the team roll the dice and enter an extra car again? I don't see that happening.

I think we are going to see Dreyer & Reinbold Racing return and a two-car program would not be a surprise. Last year, the third Ed Carpenter Racing entry was in partnership with Scuderia Corsa. Scuderia Corsa could be another option if it finds a new partnership or if ECR decides to expand to four cars for the month of May. Clauson-Marshall Racing made it last year but there is no guarantee the team will be back in 2020.

We are too far off and too many balls are in the air to see what the qualifying line will look like in May.

What Should We Expect
James Hinchcliffe is going to get a shot somewhere. I am not going to say he will go to Coyne since Coyne is also looking at Formula Two race winner Sérgio Sette Câmara and Super Formula race winner Álex Palou. Hinchcliffe will get something even if it is only part-time for Indianapolis and Toronto.

I expect Santino Ferrucci to eventually be confirmed at Coyne. There aren't any better options out there. Foyt isn't better than Coyne and Carlin isn't better than Coyne. Ferrucci will lose Bourdais as a mentor to lean on and he has lost engineer Michael Cannon as Cannon moves to be Scott Dixon's engineer but he will still have Craig Hampson.

The only noise we have heard about Foyt is Tony Kanaan and Charlie Kimball splitting a car and apparently Dalton Kellett is in contention. That would be a sad end for Kanaan because his consecutive start streak would likely end in the middle of a season at a random race because of sponsorship reasons and that doesn't feel right. I would love a pairing of Kanaan and Kimball with both as full-time Foyt drivers. That could be a pairing that really picks the team up but it will come down to funding.

Carlin is a wild card. Max Chilton stepped away from ovals in the middle of last season but he didn't rule out running ovals in the future. The introduction of the aeroscreen could bring Chilton back to full-time competition. Even if Chilton decides to remain off ovals he will still likely factor into one of the Carlin seats in a reverse Ed Carpenter role.

I think this could be the offseason with a lot of new names coming to IndyCar. All of the rides out there are dependent on funding. That is something it appears Hinchcliffe doesn't have enough of, Spencer Pigot doesn't have enough of and the only options for these teams may come from abroad.

Ed Jones is moving to Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters with Audi. Jordan King seems to be focusing on sports cars. Matheus Leist hasn't made a peep. We have heard nothing from Kyle Kaiser, J.R. Hildebrand or Oriol Servià about being serious contenders for full-time seats.

While thinking we could see an influx of talent from outside the United States, outside of Câmara and Palou being linked to the Coyne seat, there aren't other Formula Two drivers or sports car drivers linked to IndyCar. Felipe Nasr, Colin Braun and Pipo Derani are IMSA drivers that have been on IndyCar's radar for a while but we haven't heard anything serious from these three for some time and none of them have significant amount of funding, definitely not enough for a full-time IndyCar effort.

The last few years we have gone into Christmas and New Year's with 95% of the IndyCar accounted for with only one or two full-time seats unknown. We will head into 2020 with a lot of unanswered questions. Stay tuned, boys and girls.


Monday, December 9, 2019

Musings From the Weekend: Ready Player No One

The Snowball Derby was rained out. NASCAR had a banquet. Autosport had an award show. There was an endurance race in California. Dale Coyne is narrowing down his list of drivers. Zandvoort is undergoing a facelift. The Vietnam Grand Prix circuit is adding corners. Fernando Alonso is talking to Andretti Autosport about a return for the Indianapolis 500. IMSA announced the details to its 2020 television schedule. One note, this is the final Musings From the Weekend of 2019 but do not worry. Over the final weeks of the year we will revisit a few sets of predictions, hand out some awards and look ahead to the 2020 season. Here is a run down of what got me thinking.

Ready Player No One
Christmas is coming up and it is the time for trying to decide what to get others and creating a Christmas list.

There are certain things we would like to have in our lives. Either they are too expensive to go out and buy ourselves or they are items we have not gotten a chance to get but here is a chance for someone else to get it. We can put it on a list for a family member, loved one or friend to pick out for us. Our hope is when peeling away wrapping paper on Christmas morning to discover the item our hearts desired.

There are plenty of gifts for race fans. Maybe it is a pair of tickets meant for a stocking, a new t-shirt of our favorite driver or manufacture or maybe it is a book to fill our winter before race cars roar back to life. The gifts range from the young to the old. What a person who grew up in the 1960s with the likes of Foyt, Andretti and Unser would want for Christmas will likely differ than a 13-year-old who has started loving motorsports but cannot get enough for it. The elder statesman may want something that is a little less flash; paper over plastic, something to keep on a shelf. The youngling may want something to simulate a limited attention span; something that makes noise and has a lot of color.

The youths are into video games. Not all, but a lot of them are playing something. It has been this way for a while but video games have migrated from arcades into our homes and have been a regular staple in living rooms, basements and bedrooms for girls and boys for two decades now.

There are many video game options out there for motorsports fan but the one that has been lacking has been an IndyCar game. There is a Formula One game. There is a NASCAR game. There are the compilation games like Gran Turismo and Forza that allow people to drive all different types of cars, from street vehicles to race cars to the wildest imaginations from the brightest minds in motorsports. An IndyCar-specific game is nowhere to be found.

You can find IndyCars somewhere. There were IndyCars included in one of the Forza games not long ago but that is only a small taste. The IndyCar fan base has wanted a game that includes everything beyond Indianapolis Motor Speedway. They want to race the streets of St. Petersburg and Long Beach, they want to navigate Road America and Laguna Seca, and they want to run the banking of Iowa and Texas. They want a career mode, starting at the bottom of the Road to Indy and working the way up to IndyCar and hoping to get the dream call from Team Penske or Andretti Autosport.

An IndyCar video game has potential. It would be more than just driving in circles. It could be something with great depth and provide a player with plenty of content to not get tired of the game. However, there is a reason why it does not exist.

I hate to say this but the demand for an IndyCar game isn't there to justify its creation.

It is one thing for a few hundred IndyCar fans to want an IndyCar game but the number of people needed to justify not only the game itself but the level of resources needed to create each racetrack and each automobile and make it as realistic as possible costs much more than any possible revenue.

There is a strain of thought that the one thing holding IndyCar back is the lack of a video game. IndyCar is not available to a segment of the audience that spends its Tuesday nights with controllers in hand instead of reading Racer Magazine or tuning into Trackside with Curt Cavin and Kevin Lee.

The problem is just because a game exists doesn't mean people are going to buy it and play it. It is a bringing a horse to water type of situation.

Don't get me wrong, it would be better to put something on the table than nothing at all but there is a reason isn't available to begin with.

So, if an IndyCar-specific game is not possible, then what?

IndyCar was in Forza, which is a popular game, but is only available on the XBOX platform. One option could be to expand its partnership with Forza or expand with Gran Turismo, the Sony-developed PlayStation game, and have it be an integral part of either of those platforms. This has been the case with sports cars. There hasn't been a sports car game, at least not in my lifetime, but the 24 Hours of Le Mans was prominently featured in the Gran Turismo games. You could drive the Audi R18 TDI, the Peugeot 908 HDi FAP, the Corvette C5-R, the Dodge Viper GTS-R and historic cars such as the Ford GT40 Mk. I, the Ferrari 330 P4, the Jaguar XJR-9 and Mazda 787 to name a few.

There is a limit to the platforms of Gran Turismo and Forza. Only so much can be included. It is not going to be an IndyCar-game. It is going to be a game that has IndyCar. It is not going to have the depths of a career mode with the Road to Indy taken into account. It is not going to include all 16 tracks and it is not going to have all the teams and drivers.

I think it is better to have something than nothing and if that means having IndyCar be an option in a video game that includes hundreds of other cars and races than so be it. Right now, an IndyCar-specific game is not coming but perhaps IndyCar should get into a serious partnership with Gran Turismo and/or Forza and use those platforms to promote IndyCar to more people. You have give people a taste, have them drive around Indianapolis Motor Speedway in not just the DW12 but bring out the machines that made IndyCar famous, the STP-Paxton Turbocar, Lotus 56, Penscke PC-23 and the Chaparral 2K and make people see how fun IndyCar can be.

Maybe a developer is willing to take the chance. Maybe the market for an IndyCar game is greater than it appears. It is something IndyCar has to work on. It has to find a way to be available to the gaming population.

IndyCar is not going to figure it out in time for this Christmas but it has plenty of time for Christmas 2020.

Winners From the Weekend
You know the Snowball Derby was rained out but did you know...

The #10 Turn 3 Motorsports Radical of Peter Dempsey, Neil Alberico, Antoine Comeau and Eric Wagner won the 25 Hours of Thunderhill.

Coming Up This Weekend
The FIA World Endurance Championship will have an eight-hour race in Bahrain.
The World Touring Car Cup concludes its season in Sepang.


Saturday, December 7, 2019

Formula One's Best Drivers of the 2010s

We have reached the final review of the decade and, after looking over best from races from IndyCar, NASCAR and Formula One, we will conclude with the best drivers from Formula One in the 2010s.

Sixty-six drivers started a grand prix in the 2010s, which seems very low. IndyCar had 104 drivers start a race and the NASCAR Cup Series had 181 drivers start a race. Granted, the grids are larger in NASCAR and in most cases there is more fluctuation in drivers but 66 drivers? That is quite low.

Despite the number of drivers, as with IndyCar and NASCAR, the criteria to be considered for the top ten is you had to win one race. There were 198 opportunities to win a Formula One grand prix in the 2010s. If you could not win one then you are not considered.

For fans of Michael Schumacher, Felipe Massa, Nico Hülkenberg, Sergio Pérez, Romain Grosjean, Kevin Magnussen, Carlos Sainz, Jr., Marcus Ericsson, Kamui Kobayashi, Lance Stroll, Adrian Sutil, Paul di Resa, Esteban Gutiérrez, Jean-Éric Vergne, Esteban Ocon, Max Chilton, Jarno Trulli, Lando Norris, Rio Haryanto and Alexander Rossi none of these drivers were considered.

Twelve drivers won a Formula One grand prix in the 2010s. That's it. With so few race winners, I just ranked all 12; including you know who and we start with our Venezuelan friend.

12. Pastor Maldonado
Starts: 95
Wins: 1
Podium Finishes: 1
Top Five Finishes: 2
Top Ten Finishes: 13
Pole Positions: 1
Average Finish: 15
Seasons with a Victory: 1
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: Look, I will level with you, Pastor Maldonado was not the 12th best driver this decade. His victory in the 2012 Spanish Grand Prix will go down as one of the most absurd things to every happen in Formula One.

Twenty-five drivers had podium finishes in Formula One this decade. Maldonado is one of nine drivers to have only one podium finish this decade. Maldonado's best championship was 14th. Of those other eight drivers, they all finished better than 14th in the championship at least once this decade. One of those drivers is Vitaly Petrov, who had championship finishes of 13th and tenth. It includes Kobayashi, who had three consecutive championship finishes of 12th to start the decade. It includes Nick Heidfeld, who finished 11th in the championship in 2011 despite only starting 11 races. Maldonado ran all 19 races that season and was 19th.

Thirty-three drivers had top five finishes in Formula One this decade. Rubens Barrichello, Paul di Resta, Esteban Ocon and Lance Stroll had as many top five finishes at Maldonado. Antonio Giovinazzi, Heidfeld and Felipe Nasr all had only one top five finish.

Maldonado was probably the 33rd best driver this decade in Formula One. He did win one race but outside of that he was just another driver. You could probably make an argument he was only the 40th best driver. I am not sure any one would fight that... except for Maldonado himself.

11. Kimi Räikkönen
Starts: 158
Wins: 3
Podium Finishes: 41
Top Five Finishes: 75
Top Ten Finishes: 119
Pole Positions: 2
Average Finish: 7.7
Seasons with a Victory: 3
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: While being a fan favorite, Räikkönen has been living on borrowed time in Formula One.

Need I remind everyone the Finn was out of Formula One for the first two seasons of this decade? He won twice with Lotus but then spent five seasons with Ferrari and it took until his 96th start with the team to get a victory. In three of those five seasons he led zero, ten and six laps respectively.

Though Räikkönen was in the top five of the championship on five of eight occasions, I am not sure anyone saw him as a real threat. He seemed like a driver going through the motions and Ferrari kept giving him a contract. Now Alfa Romeo is giving him money.

10. Jenson Button
Starts: 137
Wins: 8
Podium Finishes: 26
Top Five Finishes: 46
Top Ten Finishes: 85
Pole Positions: 1
Average Finish: 9.4
Seasons with a Victory: 3
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: It is forgotten how Button backed up his World Drivers' Championship at the start of the decade.

Mercedes-Benz took over the Brawn GP organization and that forced Button out of the ride that he took to the mountaintop. He moved to McLaren, pairing him with Lewis Hamilton and immediately held his own with championship finishes of fifth, second and fifth in his first three seasons respectively. He had two, three and three victories in those seasons respectively.

The one down side is Button stayed with McLaren and the return of Honda was not the injection of life for the manufacture. Button spent the final two full seasons of his career and a Monaco Grand Prix significantly hampered.

9. Charles Leclerc
Starts: 42
Wins: 2
Podium Finishes: 10
Top Five Finishes: 17
Top Ten Finishes: 28
Pole Positions: 7
Average Finish: 9.2
Seasons with a Victory: 1
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: It is still early in Leclerc's career but he has jumped into Formula One and immediately found results.

His rookie season with Alfa Romeo went so well that Ferrari made him the second-youngest driver to ever run for the Scuderia. He nearly had victory in his second start but the car failed him. Leclerc went head-to-head with a four-time champion as his teammate and won the intra-team battle. He picked up his first two victories at Spa-Francorchamps and Monza. He won seven pole positions, the most in the 2019 season.

It is hard to justify putting Leclerc any higher than nine. There just isn't enough there but in ten years there will be and he should be a little higher in these rankings.

8. Valtteri Bottas
Starts: 139
Wins: 7
Podium Finishes: 45
Top Five Finishes: 78
Top Ten Finishes: 103
Pole Positions: 11
Average Finish: 7.2
Seasons with a Victory: 2
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: After going through the highs and the lows with Williams, Bottas landed at Mercedes and reached the heights every grand prix driver dreams about but continues to have low moments.

Bottas was the top Williams driver in the championship in all four seasons he was with the team. He got the most out of the cars and the competency led him to Mercedes. He has been the clear number two to Lewis Hamilton but he has gotten the points Mercedes-Benz has needed.

Should we be a little disappointed Bottas has had one season where he has been able to challenge Hamilton? This season appeared it would be it after Bottas won the season opener and two of the first four to have him leading the championship before heading to Spain but Hamilton is on another level and Bottas has done a commendable job.

7. Mark Webber
Starts: 77
Wins: 7
Podium Finishes: 32
Top Five Finishes: 51
Top Ten Finishes: 65
Pole Positions: 12
Average Finish: 6.3
Seasons with a Victory: 3
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: Webber only ran the first four seasons of this decade and he was third in the championship three times this decade. He had only one great shot at a championship and as we know his teammate Sebastian Vettel won it but Webber kept Vettel honest at Red Bull.

Webber did all he could to not be the number two driver and he had his moments. Webber was not going to change the perception of who was Red Bull's top driver but he made it clear he was the right driver to have in the team for those four seasons. It was definitely a high-note to go out on.

6. Daniel Ricciardo
Starts: 171
Wins: 7
Podium Finishes: 29
Top Five Finishes: 58
Top Ten Finishes: 98
Pole Positions: 3
Average Finish: 9.9
Seasons with a Victory: 4
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: Though having the same number of victories, three fewer podium finishes and only seven more top five finishes despite nearly 100 more starts than Webber, Ricciardo gets sixth because he forced Vettel out of Red Bull.

Ricciardo came in and the year after Vettel had won his fourth consecutive championship beat his teammate in the championship. Not only did he beat his teammate but he was the only Red Bull driver to win a race that season. Vettel was gone like that.

One season isn' the only reason Ricciardo is sixth for the decade. Let's remember the Australian started with HRT for 11 races, getting him ready for Formula One before a move to Scuderia Toro Rosso. Few Toro Rosso drivers have left an impression on Formula One. We are talking about three seasons and 50 starts where Ricciardo was only hoping to get some points.

Ricciardo got the most he could out of Red Bull at a time when Mercedes had a stranglehold on the championship. He was a one of the drivers that could regularly breakthrough. Now he has moved to Renault and the trajectory of his career is unclear. He turned 30 years old in July. Renault does not appear to be on the cusp of winning anytime soon.

Ricciardo could be one of these talents that had it but never was at the right team at the right time.

5. Fernando Alonso
Starts: 174
Wins: 11
Podium Finishes: 44
Top Five Finishes: 70
Top Ten Finishes: 111
Pole Positions: 4
Average Finish: 8.9
Seasons with a Victory: 4
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: Alonso did more with less and was agonizingly close to adding another two World Drivers' Championships to his résumé this decade.

I think Alonso covered over many of the flaws Ferrari has had for the last ten seasons and we have seen many of those exposed since his departure from the Maranello-based team. Alonso was second, fourth, second, second and sixth in the championship while with Ferrari. Felipe Massa was his teammate in all of those seasons and Massa was never better than sixth in the championship during that time.

Alonso took the leap of faith to McLaren and the Honda engine never panned out. However, Alonso got the most out of the faulty car. In 2015, he was fifth in the Hungarian Grand Prix when up to that point McLaren had two points finishes for a total of five points. The following season he picked up two top five finishes and scored a fastest lap in Italy. The year after that he got another fastest lap, skipped Monaco to run the Indianapolis 500 and still finished ahead of Stoffel Vandoorne in the championship. In his final season, he handily outperformed Vandoorne with 50 points to the Belgian's 12 points.

Alonso's career will go down as incredible but also lacking. Every move was one or two years off. His numbers are great but they still will not tell the truth length of his greatness.

4. Max Verstappen
Starts: 102
Wins: 8
Podium Finishes: 31
Top Five Finishes: 57
Top Ten Finishes: 76
Pole Positions: 3
Average Finish: 7.7
Seasons with a Victory: 4
Championships: 0

Reason For the Ranking: Verstappen came in as a boy and did not buckle from the pressure.

There were many skeptics when it was announced the Dutchman would make his Formula One debut at 17 years old for Toro Rosso. The Red Bull program pushed the limits of driver selection going younger and younger and this move forced a strict age limit as well as Super License points.

Regulations aside, Verstappen outscored teammate Carlos Sainz, Jr. by 31 points in his rookie season with Toro Rosso. Verstappen's increasingly improving results combined with Daniil Kvyat's uninspiring results led to Red Bull making a swap early in Verstappen's sophomore season and the rest is history.

Verstappen won on his Red Bull debut and he pushed his teammate Ricciardo for nearly three seasons with him taking the number one position in the team and asserting himself as one of the top drivers in Formula One. Verstappen has made a name for himself with impressive wet-weather drives and an aggressiveness that at times has led to youthful mistakes but it has also gotten him better results against drivers with at least a decade of Formula One experience.

Each season he has improved, he has gotten a little more consistent each season and with an improving Red Bull and a ripened Honda engine the 2020s could be when the young protégé meets the great expectations set before he was a man.

3. Nico Rosberg
Starts: 136
Wins: 23
Podium Finishes: 55
Top Five Finishes: 75
Top Ten Finishes: 108
Pole Positions: 30
Average Finish: 6.7
Seasons with a Victory: 5
Championships: 1

Reason For the Ranking: You cannot ignore a world championship.

Rosberg might have been in the right place at the right time but when put head-to-head with teammate Lewis Hamilton it was not a walkover. Rosberg had the ability to keep up with Hamilton and beat Hamilton enough to be a championship-challenger.

With that said, Rosberg was also known for stepping on his teammate's toes to stay ahead. There were plenty of clashes and infighting, some of which landed at the feet of Hamilton but most of the time it felt Rosberg was the instigator, notably Spain 2016 and Austria 2016.

There was a level of consistency though that cannot be ignored. While Hamilton had his few problems in 2014, Rosberg kept putting the car on the podium and forced Hamilton to win more than double the number of Rosberg's victories to win the world championship. He did win seven consecutive races from the end of 2015 through the first four races of 2016.

At the end of 2016, there was no margin for error and Rosberg basically had to finish on the podium for the final nine races of the season. While we saw the fragility of Rosberg in other seasons, when he had a chance to close that season out he did.

2. Sebastian Vettel
Starts: 197
Wins: 48
Podium Finishes: 111
Top Five Finishes: 156
Top Ten Finishes: 172
Pole Positions: 52
Average Finish: 5.0
Seasons with a Victory: 8
Championships: 4

Reason For the Ranking: The Red Bull days.

As I touched upon at the end of the Best Races post, Red Bull-era Vettel was one of the most ruthless winners of the 2010s. It was a driver that could take a broken car and drive it to an astonishing result that most other drivers could not come close to matching.

Vettel won when the pressure was on and he also won when the rest of the field was out of his rearview mirror. The dominance was historic. He won the final nine races of the 2013 season, a Formula One record. He won 13 races that season, matching Michael Schumacher's single season record. He had 17 podium finishes in 2011, matching another Schumacher and a record that Hamilton has since also matched in four of the last five seasons.

Though he has not come close to matching his glory days at Red Bull, Vettel has had respectable showings, winning races with Ferrari and with consecutive vice-champion seasons in 2017 and 2018. However, we have also seen Vettel become a little more unhinged in recent seasons. We saw Ricciardo force Vettel out the door in 2014. In 2017 and possibly even 2018, Vettel had the better car but could not close out the season. He started the 2017 season with three victories and three runner-up finishes in the first six races and was leading the championship after the Belgian Grand Prix only for Hamilton to go on a tear and clinching the championship three races early while Vettel got caught in first lap accidents and had a few gremlins.

Vettel was leading the championship halfway through the 2018 season until he threw away a certain victory in Germany when no one was pressuring him. He simply went off in a drizzle and from there on the championship was Hamilton's. Vettel won four of the first ten races in 2018 but only won one of the final 11 races.

We have seen Vettel get caught in clashes with Verstappen and now Leclerc and appear to be the weaker man in each case. For a driver that started the decade unbreakable we are seeing the cracks form and the end approaching.

1. Lewis Hamilton
Starts: 198
Wins: 73
Podium Finishes: 124
Top Five Finishes: 157
Top Ten Finishes: 176
Pole Positions: 71
Average Finish: 4.7
Seasons with a Victory: 10
Championships: 5

Reason For the Ranking: The numbers speak for themselves.

Hamilton won 73 races, 25 more than the next driver. He won 71 pole positions, 19 more than the next driver. He is the only driver to win a race in every season this decade and he won five championships.

We have seen Hamilton make an assault on the record book that many never thought was possible in the shadows of Michael Schumacher's retirement. When Schumacher walked away from Formula One at the end of 2006, no one thought 91 grand prix victories could be touch. Alain Prost was still second all-time at the end of 2006, 40 victories off Schumacher. Seven championships seemed untouchable. Schumacher reached 5,000 laps led when no other driver had broken 3,000 laps led.

Hamilton entered in 2007 and he spent the entire 2010s running down the German. We will head into 2020 with Hamilton needing only eight victories to surpass Schumacher's 91. Hamilton has led 4,486 laps in his career, 625 laps behind Schumacher. He is one world championship away from seven.

While Hamilton still has records to break he has already shattered many. In this decade, Hamilton became the all-time leader in pole positions, he has won the most races from pole position all-time and he has the most front row starts all-time. He has started the most consecutive races. He has the most races led in Formula One history. He broke the record for most consecutive races led and has since matched it. If he leads one lap in the 2020 Australian Grand Prix he will break a record he set. He matched Nick Heidfeld's record of most consecutive victories and he has since matched it again. If Hamilton finishes the 2020 Australian Grand Prix he will have another record.

Hamilton re-wrote the Formula One record book before Schumacher's ink had even dried. Did he have the benefit of being with the best team? Of course, but we could be talking about Nico Rosberg having all these records if it was as simple as having the best car. We have also seen plenty of times when Hamilton has pulled out victories and results from sheer intelligence. While Schumacher made a reputation of taking out other drivers and running rivals off track, Hamilton has seen his success come with wit more than aggression.

We do not know how long Hamilton will race into the 2020s. It feels like he could walk away once he gets to the top but there are plenty of worthy milestones to achieve. He only needs 16 victories to reach 100 grand prix victories and he is a guy who has been averaging north of ten victories a season for the last half of the decade. The outright lead in championship could be his and he could (along with Sebastian Vettel and Fernando Alonso if he returns to Formula One) become only the second driver to win a grand prix in three different decades joining Jack Brabham in doing so.

I don't think Hamilton will do in the 2020s what he did in the 2010s but I think we will see him further expand on what the possibilities are for a grand prix driver and continue to improve his case for the greatest driver of all-time.