Showing posts with label Mark Webber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Webber. Show all posts

July 11, 2009

F1: German GP lineup, with avg. finish

Mark Webber earned his first Formula 1 pole and will sit at the head of the field to start the German Grand Prix.

The dominant racers of the year aren't far behind, however. Rubens Barrichello and Jenson Button start second and third.

One other qualification of note was Lewis Hamilton. After a couple of weeks of poor time trials, he finally advanced into the final session of knockout qualification and will start fifth. This week, he said the team was fixing their problems. It appears he may just have been right.

Results, with average finish

StartDriverAvg. FinAvg. StartAttempts
1Mark Webber11.8312.176
2Rubens Barrichello5.387.7713
3Jenson Button10.5011.508
4Sebastian Vettel


5Lewis Hamilton9.0010.001
6Heikki Kovalainen8.007.001
7Adrian Sutil19.0021.001
8Felipe Massa6.808.805
9Kimi Raikkonen11.434.007
10Nelson Piquet Jr


11Nick Heidfeld10.2510.388
12Fernando Alonso4.507.336
13Kazuki Nakajima


14Jarno Trulli12.307.2010
15Nico Rosberg13.5016.502
16Robert Kubica7.005.001
17Sebastian Buemi


18Giancarlo Fisichella11.0011.4212
19Timo Glock


20Sebastian Bourdais



More Formula 1 Newsbreakers

July 1, 2009

Week 27 Unified Power Rankings

Jenson Button and Tony Stewart kept their positions atop the Unified Power Rankings. Button's number one spot is unchanged because Formula 1 had the week off, but Stewart only enhanced his second-place position with a solid fifth-place finish at New Hampshire—his fifth consecutive result of seventh or better. These two drivers have redefined the concept of place-and-hold.

Mark Webber also jumped up the grid, improving his rank from 10th to third. How is that possible with the series going idle? The Power Ranking formula looks at the last 90 days for a snapshot of how drivers are performing right now, and that means that Webber's 12th-place finish in the ING Australian Grand Prix is no longer held against him. Since that race, he has posted five top-fives in seven races—including three runner-up results.

Dario Franchitti also climbed the charts from eighth to fourth on the strength of his solid second-place run on the short track in Richmond. In his last four Indy short track starts, that's his worst result after winning the other three. Chip Ganassi fans should be quite proud of the organization; last week they finished 1-2, and Scott Dixon—the winner of the SunTrust Indy Challenge—settled in right behind Franchitti in fifth.

It was a great weekend for Brad Keselowski. He competed in the Nationwide and Cup series and earned accolades in both. A third-place finish in the Camping World RV Sales 200 was his fifth consecutive top-five, which easily makes him the best Nationwide Regular in the game. He also finished sixth in Cup competition and while that may have been aided by rain, the points pay the same to fantasy owners.

Ron Hornaday Jr. is slowly making his way back up the grid. With back-to-back victories at Milwaukee and Memphis, he's improved 10 positions and lands 32nd on our chart. That may not seem like much, but only two weeks ago he was in danger of falling out of the top 50. Better still, he is in striking distance of the highest ranked Camping World Truck Series driver—Matt Crafton. In the last three months, Crafton has finished worse than seventh only once, and consistency is often more important than raw strength in fantasy games.

Unified Power Rankings
Top 50


RankDriverPointsLast week+/-
1Jenson Button106.7110
2Tony Stewart99.6220
3Mark Webber93.14107
4Dario Franchitti92.6384
5Scott Dixon88.13127
6Kurt Busch86.75137
7Brad Keselowski86.39147
8Rubens Barrichello86.2991
9Jimmie Johnson86.257-2
10Erik Darnell84.83166
11Joey Logano83.362716
12Helio Castroneves82.573-9
13Ryan Briscoe82.504-9
14Greg Biffle82.50228
15Kyle Busch82.44183
16Jeff Gordon82.25171
17Mark Martin82.155-12
18Jason Leffler81.776-12
19Danica Patrick81.7515-4
20Sebastian Vettel81.433212
21Carl Edwards80.96210
22Ryan Newman80.1311-11
23Matt Kenseth79.25252
24Juan Montoya78.17262
25Dan Wheldon78.0024-1
26Denny Hamlin77.0819-7
27Matt Crafton76.8620-7
28Kasey Kahne74.92313
29Timo Glock74.4323-6
30Nico Rosberg73.29300
31Stephen Leicht73.00
NR
32Ron Hornaday Jr72.38408
33Jeff Burton70.8828-5
34Steve Wallace70.33373
35David Reutimann70.2933-2
36Brian Vickers69.18426
37Felipe Massa68.866326
38Marco Andretti68.3834-4
39Justin Allgaier68.0036-3
40Jason Keller67.9238-2
41Tayler Malsam67.71410
42Tony Kanaan67.6335-7
43Fernando Alonso67.0029-14
44Sam Hornish Jr67.00528
45Kimi Raikkonen66.715712
46Johnny Sauter66.575913
47Jamie McMurray66.5044-3
48Colin Braun65.717628
49Tomas Scheckter65.40
NR
50Dale Earnhardt Jr65.1339-11


Previous Unified Power Rankings:

Week 26
Week 25
Week 24
Week 23
Week 22
Week 21
Week 20

June 21, 2009

F1: British GP Results

Finally someone other than Jenson Button won a Formula 1 race. Prior to the British Grand Prix, he had won six of seven events with Sebastian Vettel taking the Chinese Grand Prix. It's only fitting that Vettel took this race as well after winning the pole and dominating at Silverstone.

For his part, Button finish only sixth. Is the competition finally catching up to him? Don't assume that just yet because teammate Rubens Barrichello was in third.

In several races this year the Brawn teammates Button and Barrichello finished one-two. Red Bull Racing kept that tradition alive by placing Mark Webber in second. That was his fourth consecutive top-five finish this season, which has made him a good driver to keep on your roster.
One other item of note: with the exception of Sebastian Bourdais and Heikki Kovalainen who retired at the start, everyone finished either one the lead lap or only one circuit off the pace and an impressive 11 drivers completed the distance.

Results, with average finish

FinishStartDriverLapsStatusAvg Fin
11Sebastian Vettel60Running10.00
23Mark Webber60Running12.43
32Rubens Barrichello60Running7.65
411Felipe Massa60Running7.86
57Nico Rosberg60Running8.75
66Jenson Button60Running9.90
74Jarno Trulli60Running11.46
89Kimi Raikkonen60Running4.78
98Timo Glock60Running10.50
1016Giancarlo Fisichella60Running8.93
115Kazuki Nakajima60Running9.50
1214Nelson Piquet Jr59Running14.00
1312Robert Kubica59Running10.33
1410Fernando Alonso59Running8.63
1515Nick Heidfeld59Running10.40
1619Lewis Hamilton59Running6.67
1718Adrian Sutil59Running18.67
1820Sebastian Buemi59Running18.00
1917Sebastian Bourdais0Retired15.00
2013Heikki Kovalainen0Retired10.67


More Formula 1 Newsbreakers

June 19, 2009

F1: Vettel, Weber tops both practices

Sebastian Vettel and Mark Weber were the fastest and second fastest drivers respectively in the two practice sessions for the British Grand Prix at Silverstone.

In the first practice, the two Brawn Racing teammates Jenson Button and Rubens Barrichello were not far behind, placing third and fourth on the grid.

Our View: These two teams have been the class of the field all season and those four drivers are likely to dominate in the top-five again.

Practice 1 Times
Practice 2 Times

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June 7, 2009

F1: Turkish GP Results

O.k., this is getting ridiculous—unless you happen to be a Jenson Button fan. He's won six of the seven Formula 1 races this year and the championship is nearly a foregone conclusion. And this is coming from a driver who couldn't buy a top-five last year with a best of sixth in Spain and only a handful of top-10s. That just goes to show you how much difference strong equipment makes.

The biggest story was the failure to finish by Rubens Barrichello. He has been the wingman of Button all year and has also swept the top five with three runner-up finishes to this credit. He spun after making contact with Heikki Kovalainen and damaged his nose with contact from Adrian Sutil.

Red Bull teammates Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel finished second and third, which puts tem in a position to pounce in the unlikely event that Button stumbles.

Results, with average finish

FinishStartDriverLapsStatusAvg Fin
12Jenson Button58Running6.80
24Mark Webber58Running12.20
31Sebastian Vettel58Running13.00
45Jarno Trulli58Running9.00
59Nico Rosberg58Running9.50
67Felipe Massa58Running5.60
710Robert Kubica58Running7.75
813Timo Glock58Running10.50
96Kimi Raikkonen58Running7.20
108Fernando Alonso58Running4.60
1111Nick Heidfeld58Running10.40
1212Kazuki Nakajima58Running15.50
1316Lewis Hamilton58Running6.67
1414Heikki Kovalainen57Running10.67
1518Sebastian Buemi57Running15.00
1617Nelson Piquet Jr57Running15.50
1715Adrian Sutil57Running18.00
1820Sebastian Bourdais57Running18.00
193Rubens Barrichello47Retired13.60
2019Giancarlo Fisichella4Retired11.80


More Formula 1 Newsbreakers

May 13, 2009

Week 21 Unified Power Rankings

Jenson Button won the Spanish Grand Prix, which was his fourth Formula 1 victory in five starts, and by virtue of dominating that series, he remains firmly in control of the "highly-scientific" Unified Power Rankings.* What makes this more impressive still, is that he's doing so with a team that was not favored to run well at the start of the season because they are new to the series.

Teammate Rubens Barrichello finished second in last week's battle in Spain, which allowed him to pad his advantage over the remainder of the field. Barrichello was mildly upset that he was not allowed the opportunity to win after team strategy was altered mid-race that favored Button.

Meanwhile, the NASCAR boys continue to run strong and take up most of the remaining top-10 spots. Tony Stewart's third-place finish at Darlington was enough to keep him third on the Unified Power Rankings grid, while Jeff Gordon's fifth-place finish allowed him to leapfrog Kurt Busch into fourth.

The Indy Racing League has not yet run five races this season, which is the minimum required for inclusion to this list, so none of their drivers will be included until after the Indy 500.

Three drivers, Mark Webber, Mark Martin and Fernando Alonso jumped nine positions between last week and this week to become the biggest gainers.

Justin Allgaier's impressive fifth-place finish in the Nationwide Darlington race allowed him to leap onto the grid in 45th, which Nick Heidfeld scored a seventh in the Spanish Grand Prix to sneak into 50th.

Unified Power Rankings


RankDriverCompetition PointsLast week+/-
1Jenson Button107.8010
2Rubens Barrichello96.0020
3Tony Stewart92.9230
4Jeff Gordon90.8251
5Kurt Busch89.554-1
6Denny Hamlin82.5071
7Jason Leffler82.20103
8Jimmie Johnson81.73124
9Timo Glock81.606-3
10Ryan Newman81.38133
11Ron Hornaday Jr80.809-2
12Jeff Burton78.94142
13Kyle Busch78.528-5
14Mark Webber78.40239
15Carl Edwards78.3311-4
16Greg Biffle77.40160
17Sebastian Vettel77.20247
18Matt Kenseth76.76191
19Juan Montoya74.3617-2
20Mark Martin73.83299
21Fernando Alonso73.80309
22Clint Bowyer73.1415-7
23Brad Keselowski72.73285
24Brian Vickers72.3820-4
25Kevin Harvick72.00272
26Dale Earnhardt Jr71.8021-5
27Matt Crafton71.8025-2
28David Reutimann71.4022-6
29Kasey Kahne70.0026-3
30Jason Keller69.60311
31Joey Logano69.50343
32Mike Skinner67.33364
33David Ragan67.0032-1
34Johnny Benson Jr67.00373
35Marcos Ambrose66.1833-2
36Lewis Hamilton65.20393
37Nico Rosberg65.20403
38Martin Truex Jr64.73457
39Jarno Trulli64.0018-21
40Casey Mears63.9135-5
41Reed Sorenson63.73410
42Scott Lagasse Jr63.7038-4
43Steve Wallace63.60430
44Regan Smith63.0042-2
45Justin Allgaier62.60NR
46Jamie McMurray61.5544-2
47Chad McCumbee61.20470
48Brendan Gaughan60.9046-2
49A J Allmendinger60.82501
50Nick Heidfeld60.80NR


The Unified Power Rankings are based on "percentage points." Starting with a 100 score for the winner of a Nationwide race, each subsequent position is decremented by a percentage that relates to the number of drivers in the field. In a 50-car field of potential qualifiers, the second-place driver receives 98 points, third-place gets 96 points, the 43rd-place driver gets 16 points (because he beat eight other driver to even get into the field) and so on until the last non-qualifier in 50th-place gets two points.

Only races run in the last three months count in this formula.

The Cup, IRL and Formula 1 series start at 110 points for a victory (since its so difficult to win one of these races) and then decrements 1/50th of 110 points for each subsequent position. It’s an unscientific way to determine who is the best in their series, while simultaneously trying to compare apples to oranges.


Previous Unified Power Rankings:

Week 20

May 10, 2009

F1: Spanish Grand Prix Results

Jenson Button has gotten off to an amazing start in 2009 by winning four of the first five events on the Formula 1 calendar, but the Spanish Grand Prix was a study in domination for the entire team. This week, Button led teammate Rubens Barrichello to the line. Team orders may have come into play, but either way, both drivers earned maximum points.

FinishStartDriverLapsStatus
11Jenson Button66Running
23Rubens Barrichello66Running
35Mark Webber66Running
42Sebastian Vettel66Running
58Fernando Alonso66Running
64Felipe Massa66Running
713Nick Heidfeld66Running
89Nico Rosberg66Running
914Lewis Hamilton65Running
106Timo Glock65Running
1110Robert Kubica65Running
1212Nelson Piquet Jr65Running
1311Kazuki Nakajima65Running
1420Giancarlo Fisichella65Running
1516Kimi Raikkonen17Hydraulics
1618Heikki Kovalainen7Gear Box
177Jarno Trulli0Accident
1815Sebastian Buemi0Accident
1917Sebastian Bourdais0Accident
2019Adrian Sutil0Accident