The Last Time Qualifying Was Postponed to Sunday

Qualifying for the United States Grand Prix was pushed back to Sunday morning because of rain and standing water on the track. Q3 was cancelled Sunday, leaving Nico Rosberg with yet another pole position start. Lewis Hamilton took second place followed by both the Red Bulls and Force Indias.

The last time a qualifying session was postponed to the following day was at the 2013 Australian Grand Prix. Sebastien Vettel started on pole but Kimi Raikkonen took home the race win starting in seventh. Lewis Hamilton ended up in fifth place while his teammate Nico Rosberg was forced out of the race due to an electrical failure.

If that were to happen today, Lewis Hamilton would clinch the 2015 Driver’s World Championship with a ninth place or worse result from Sebastien Vettel.

More information on the 2013 race can be found here.

by: Drew B., Founder

sDRS Ratings: Round 15

Ratings Valid Through Round 15

Read about how sDRS is calculated here.

The Statistics

  • Lewis Hamilton won round 15 of the season at the Russian Grand Prix two weeks ago. After a brief battle with Nico Rosberg, Hamilton led 48 laps on his way to being 5.9 seconds in the clear of the field. The win was Hamilton’s ninth of the year and put him 66 points ahead of his closest championship contender, Sebastien Vettel.
  • Force India made it to the podium once again with Sergio Perez taking home a third place finish. His teammate, Nico Hulkenberg, wasn’t as lucky Sunday and retired on the first lap of the race after a crash with Marcus Ericsson. 
  • Nico Rosberg also retired from the race with a throttle issue on the seventh lap of the race. With this retirement not only did his sDRS rating drop, but his hopes of a championship have been depleted greatly. He sits 73 points out from Hamilton with just four races remaining (100 maximum points). Hamilton just needs a few points each race to secure his title. 
The ratings after Round 15 heading into the United States Grand Prix are:
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 sDRS Pos. 
Driver
 Rating 
 Champ. Pos. 
 Diff. 
1
   Lewis Hamilton
1740
1
0
2
   Sebastian Vettel
1688
2
0
3
   Nico Rosberg
1660
3
0
4
   Kimi Raikkonen
1574
4
0
5
   Valtteri Bottas
1571
5
0
6
   Felipe Massa
1559
6
0
7
   Daniil Kvyat
1534
7
0
8
   Daniel Ricciardo
1525
8
0
9
   Sergio Perez
1522
9
0
10
   Romain Grosjean
1485
10
0
11
   Max Verstappen
1483
12
1
12
Alexander Rossi*
1483
21
9
13
   Felipe Nasr
1452
13
0
14
   Carlos Sainz, Jr.
1449
15
1
15
   Marcus Ericsson
1435
17
2
16
   Nico Hulkenberg
1419
11
-5
17
   Pastor Maldonado
1416
14
-3
18
   Fernando Alonso
1391
16
-2
19
   Jenson Button
1390
18
-1
20
   Roberto Merhi
1382
20
0
21
   Will Stevens
1342
19
-2


* Has not completed the minimum number of races to be qualified with an accurate score.

by: Drew B., Founder


sDRS

The statistic – sDRS (Simple Driver Rating System)


What it is – sDRS is loosely based on the Elo Rating system, but has some major differences to account for the multiple competitors in motorsport racing. The system tells us how strong a particular driver is during a season and how close the competition is to each other. It can be used to predict which driver will be the strongest heading into a race and also accounts for past year’s performance. 

The calculation: sDRS for Formula One is calculated fairly simply. All new drivers are initialized with 1500 points (which also happens to the long term average of all driver’s ratings). Points are awarded based on finishing position after each race as follows:

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  Place     Points     Place      Points  
1 20 11 0
2 15 12 -2
3 12 13 -3
4 10 14 -5
5 9 15 -7
6 7 16 -9
7 5 17 -10
8 3 18 -12
9 2 19 -15
10 0 20 -20
The formula for calculating the new sDRS score is:
NEW_sDRS = OLD_sDRS + POSITION_POINTS
The nature of this scoring means that the system, like Elo, is zero sum. This means for every point one driver loses, another one gains. This serves to keep the system balanced and easy to judge throughout seasons, no matter the scoring system in use. sDRS is also a much better predictor for mid to back field drivers who don’t get much love from Formula One’s top ten scoring system. It can show the best of the rest just as easily as it can show the best overall.
sDRS rewards consistency over one off races, too. A driver may get a big jump in points for a good result one week, but if he doesn’t back it up after that, his rating will fall back down. This avoids a major pitfall of Formula One scoring in that one driver could get a lucky result and sit in a good points position all year long. A driver will always gain points for being better than average (tenth or eleventh place), and always lose points for a result worse than average. 
Speaking of average, the majority of the field will have an sDRS score of 1400-1700. 1500 is considered an average driver, less than 1400 is a bad driver (worthy candidate for replacement next season in most cases), and greater than 1700 is a great driver. A score above 1850 is the sign of a world class driver.
At the end of each season, driver’s scores are reverted to the mean by one half. This accounts for the unpredictability of car performance each year. With car redevelopment each season, it’s highly likely that a team who was successful one season could be well of the pace this year. Reverting to the mean corrects for this and makes the ratings more accurate at the start of a season. Think McLaren from 2014 to 2015.
Telling the relative strength of the field for a given season is a strength of sDRS. The point spread between the lowest and highest rated drivers tells us how closely matched the field is. A spread of less than 200 points is incredibly close and usually doesn’t occur in Formula One. 300-400 points is what an average Formula One field looks like and more than 500 usually means there is a powerhouse team dominating most of the season.

Drawbacks – Like any rating system, sDRS is not perfect and has its quirks. For starters, sDRS doesn’t know which track the series is going to next or how many races a driver has competed in. So for example, a driver’s great historical record at a track isn’t accounted for in the calculations before that race. All sDRS knows is that a driver has been good, bad, or average this year. The second problem is that new drivers will usually have unpredictable ratings for the first five races of the season. It takes sDRS a few races to center in on their real score and see if their early results were a fluke or a sign of things to come.

It’s a simple rating system, meaning it uses very limited variables to give a score. This is beneficial in a lot of cases as the more saturated a predictive statistic becomes the more likely it is to fall victim to too much noise – which screws up the data. sDRS does a great job of showing the strength of drivers relative to each other, but shouldn’t be used as an all or nothing guide by any means.

Ratings will be updated after each week of the Formula One season.

by: Drew B., Founder

Formula E Preview: Round One


Formula E commences its second season this weekend with round one of the 24 race season in Beijing, China. The ten team and 20 driver setup features a wealth of talent in drivers like Simona de Silvestro, Lucas di Grassi, and Bruno Senna – and of course last year’s champion Nelson Piquet, Jr. Di Grassi won the race last year by 2.8 seconds and only led one lap the entire race! 

Let’s take a look at some numbers of note heading into the first round.

  • Last year’s championship was decided in the last race of the year and the two contenders ended up only being separated by a single point. A championship that close gave Formula E some good publicity last season and the FIA will certainly want another close battle this year. Just for some reference, the last time Formula One had a championship like that was three years ago when Sebastien Vettel edged out Fernando Alonso by three points. IndyCar had a championship decided by zero points (a tiebreaker was used) this year.
  • Seven different drivers won races last season and the most any one driver won was three. These numbers will obviously change this year as the schedule is over double the length of last year’s. 65 percent of the field (13 drivers) made it to the podium.
  • There was just one caution at Beijing last year that lasted for two laps for a crash by Bruno Senna on the second lap of the race. Just like Formula One, the Formula E series also uses a safety car in the event of larger crashes or debris on track.
Series Refresher
The points system is the same as Formula One except there are five extra points available over the course of the race weekend. Three are awarded to the driver who secures pole position and two more are given to whoever sets the fastest lap during the race. 
Drivers must stop once during the race to change cars. Yes, get out, run over, and jump in another car. It’s a little weird at times but hasn’t seemed to detract from the tight racing and battles. There were 29 lead changes last season, averaging 2.6 per race. The race with the most lead changes (5) was Miami while the least (0) was Monte Carlo – which is kind of expected considering its notoriety as a processional race.
by: Drew B., Founder 

Honda Testing 2016 Aero Kit Components at Road America

Photo Credit: Chris Owens
Honda spent some time at last week’s Road America test working with new possible components for their 2016 aero kit. Although the manufacturer isn’t confirmed for a return to IndyCar next year, they are still working on car development. 


Ryan Hunter-Reay’s camouflaged Honda machine was doing the component testing on track. The most noticeable change on the car came in the design of the side pod. It looks almost identical to the one Chevy ran this past season.

Speaking to RACER, HPD vice president Steve Eriksen said “we’re allowed, just like Chevrolet, to test concepts and ideas before we homologate those aero kit pieces, and we have a series of tests planned to find directions on what we want to use.”

“We’ll continue testing prototype pieces during the offseason.”


The following, courtesy of RACER, gives an outline of what Honda and Chevy are allowed to change on their aero kits, per the current rules.

Per IndyCar’s aero kit rulebook, manufacturers are allowed to replace select pieces on the car for 2016. The majority involve oval aerodynamics, including new Speedway front wing main planes and end plates, new speedway rear wing end plates, and new Indy 500 rear wing main planes and end plates. For road and street courses, minor updates to the front and rear wing components are permitted, and a new engine air intake is open for development.

Honda will be looking to close the gap to their Chevy counterparts during the offseason. With a limited testing schedule, a good majority of this testing will have to be done in wind tunnels and on the computer – not on track.

Chevy hasn’t started testing new aero kit designs publicly.