Press Release

 Formula One Medals 

30/01/2009 

Further to the proposal for medals to replace points in the FIA Formula One World Championship, the FIA has conducted an analysis of how the proposed system would have altered the results of previous seasons.

Under the medals system, it is proposed that the top three drivers in each race would win gold, silver and bronze medals. At the end of the season the driver with the most gold medals would win the championship. If two or more drivers have the same number of golds then the silver medals would come into account and so on.

The FIA’s analysis shows that the medal system would change the outcomes of past World Championships considerably. Only 22 of the 59 World Championships to date would have the same top 3. The other 37 World Championships would be different.
The World Champion would be altered on 13 occasions.

The medal system would create three “new” World Champions who did not win the title using the various points systems.

The overall effect would be to reduce the number of World Champions, concentrating the titles in a smaller group.

The results that would change are largely before 1990. The last 20 years would be largely unchanged.

In the overall assessment the list of World Championships per driver would be altered as follows:


 

 1958 Stirling Moss     instead of Mike Hawthorn
 1964 Jim Clark    instead of John Surtees
 1967 Jim Clark    instead of Denny Hulme
 1977 Mario Andretti     instead of Niki Lauda
 1979 Alan Jones      instead of Jody Scheckter
 1981 Alain Prost     instead of Nelson Piquet
 1982 Didier Pironi    instead of Keke Rosberg
 1983 Alain Prost        instead of Nelson Piquet
 1984 Alain Prost       instead of Niki Lauda
 1986 Nigel Mansell     instead of Alain Prost
 1987 Nigel Mansell  instead of Nelson Piquet
 1989 Ayrton Senna     instead of Alain Prost
 2008 Felipe Massa       instead of Lewis Hamilton

 


 

Michael Schumacher  7  1994  1995  2000 2001 2002  2003  2004 
Juan Manuel Fangio   1951  1954  1955  1956  1957    
Alain Prost  5  1981 1983  1984  1985  1993     
Jim Clark  4 1963 1964 1965 1967      
Ayrton Senna   4 1988 1989 1990 1991      
Jack Brabham     3 1959 1960 1966        
Jackie Stewart      3 1969 1971 1973        
Nigel Mansell    3 1986 1987 1992        


 

Instead of the existing totals:

Michael Schumacher     7 1994 1995  2000   2001  2002 2003 2004 
Juan Manuel Fangio     5 1951  1954  1955  1956  1957   
Alain Prost    4 1985  1986 1989  1993       
Jack Brabham     3 1959  1960 1966        
Jackie Stewart     3 1969  1971  1973         
Niki Lauda   3 1975  1977 1984         
Nelson Piquet   3 1981 1983  1987         
Ayrton Senna       3 1988 1990 1991        


 

Key notional changes to be noted:

Brabham under the ownership of Bernie Ecclestone would have won no Drivers’ Championships.

 

Stirling Moss would have been the first British World Champion.

 

Jim Clark would have won four titles, rather than two. He would have won three consecutive  titles in 1963-64-65.

 

Mario Andretti and Alan Jones would each have won two titles instead of one.

 

Niki Lauda would have lost two of his three championships and would have just one title to his name.

 

It should be noted, however, that the 1977 result is skewed by the fact that Lauda left Ferrari as soon as he had won the title and did not compete in the final races. If the scoring system had been different the result would almost certainly not have favoured Andretti.

 

Nelson Piquet would have lost all three of his World Championships.

 

All four World Champions between 1981-1984 would have been different.

 

Alain Prost would have won five World Championships but they would be different to the four that he actually claimed. His titles were won in 1985, 1986, 1989 and 1993. With the medal system they would have been 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985 and 1993. He would have won three consecutive titles in 1983-85.

 

Nigel Mansell would have won three World Championships instead of one, adding to 1986 and 1987 to his 1992 triumph.

 

Ayrton Senna would have won the 1989 title and thus would have had four consecutive titles between 1988 and 1991.

The duration of the World Championship battles

 

The duration of the World Championship battle would have been altered in 22 of the 59 seasons. The medal system would have had no effect in 37 of the 59 World Championships.

 

Fourteen World Championship battles would have been shorter (1955, 1970, 1978, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2003 and 2004).

 

Eight World Championship battles would have lasted longer (1973, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1990, 1991, 2001 and 2005).

 

In terms of World Championship final race showdowns, there would have been five lost (1955, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2000) but six gained (1977, 1979, 1980, 1990, 1991 and 2005).

 

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For Media Information Purposes - No Regulatory Value.