Get your calculators out again – the F1 teams are planning a further change to the 2010 points system to give even more points to those who finish in the lower half of the top ten.
However the revised system, which has already been changed once since last year, would also cut the value of a second place finish, according to Autosport.
Here’s how the second proposal for the 2010 F1 points system compares to the new system announced last month and the two that preceded it:
Finishing position | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
1991-2002 | 10 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | ||||
2003-2009 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | ||
2010 Proposal 1 | 25 | 20 | 15 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
2010 Proposal 2 | 25 | 18 | 15 | 12 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
The teams want to offer points to recognise finishes further down the order which is fair enough. But are they being too generous? Under the new plan a sixth-placed finish, which was worth a tenth of a win in 2002, will be worth almost a third of a win this year.
This graph shows the percentage value of each finishing position on the above table, and it’s clear to see how each new version of the system has become more generous:
Although the value of second place has been cut, the difference between it and a win is still nothing like as wide as it was in 2002.
Under this latest proposal it would be even easier for a driver who’d won several races at the start of the year to cruise to the title by picking up minor points finishes later in the season.
Whereas the original points system planned for 2010 would have increased Jenson Button’s winning margin over Sebastian Vettel to 27.5 points, this would increase it even further, to 33.5 points.
Here’s how the 2009 championship standings would have looked using the latest 2010 points system:
Driver | Points |
Jenson Button | 239.5 |
Sebastian Vettel | 206 |
Rubens Barrichello | 191 |
Mark Webber | 170 |
Kimi Raikkonen | 124 |
Lewis Hamilton | 123 |
Nico Rosberg | 94 |
Jarno Trulli | 82 |
Fernando Alonso | 73 |
Timo Glock | 68.5 |
Heikki Kovalainen | 58 |
Felipe Massa | 56 |
Nick Heidfeld | 51 |
Robert Kubica | 47 |
Giancarlo Fisichella | 24 |
Sebastien Buemi | 20 |
Adrian Sutil | 15 |
Kamui Kobayashi | 10 |
Sebastien Bourdais | 8.5 |
Kazuki Nakajima | 5 |
Nelson Piquet Jnr | 1 |
Jaime Alguersuari | 0 |
Luca Badoer | 0 |
Romain Grosjean | 0 |
Vitantonio Liuzzi | 0 |
See the actual points here: Final 2009 F1 championship standings
Happily the teams have avoided over-complicated changes like giving a point for pole and fastest lap, which would only lead to some rather unsatisfactory ways of deciding the world championship anyway.
What do you think of the latest change to the points system? Is it better or worse than the original plan for 2010?
New points system for 2010
Chalky
25th January 2010, 13:06
I’m not fussed. Is the teams motive there to increase revenue through sponsorship deals?
i.e: The X$ per championship point scored deals are worth more this way.
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
25th January 2010, 13:10
If they can find sponsors that gullible they’ll snap them up, but I doubt it!
Bewildered
25th January 2010, 20:43
Your poster boy Keith, NP Jr, Managed to score a grand total of 1 point, marginally beating Mr Badoer in the table rankings, now he must be pleased with that.
Chippie
25th January 2010, 13:16
MUCH BETTER – More consistent and gives a greater points haul to the victor. This I think is the best points system devised yet for F1.
Pradeek
25th January 2010, 13:23
More points to the 4-8 places compared with last time. Probably better because of the tight competition this season with Ferrari, Mercedes, McLaren and Red Bull.
Adrian
25th January 2010, 13:25
I don’t mind either of these 2. Just so long as they decide on one and I can then get my head round it.
Can you imagine the maths though if we have a 3 or 4 way title decider this season??
David
25th January 2010, 13:26
I overall preferred the old 9 (or 10), 6, 4, 3, 2, 1…but among the last option the very last one is the best to me.
On observation I would like to give: is it really worth to spend a lot of time in decisions about scoring??? Isn’t overtake the real problem of formula 1 sport???
David (not the same :p)
25th January 2010, 13:46
Are either of them actually problems? F1 has done fine with jackall overtaking for more than the last decade. And F1 has done fine with the 9-6, 10-6, 10-8 points systems, too. Massive audiences, massive dollars, massive recognition.
Robert McKay
25th January 2010, 13:29
I think this system looks better, in both the gap between first and second and in the tail-end points.
Bewildered
25th January 2010, 20:46
I agree, we can now see that Nelson P JR, is actually a better driver than Luca Badoer, as NP has 1 point to LB’s 0 points. This is a detail that the previous table just didn’t reveal.
PJA
25th January 2010, 13:29
The fact that they are changing the system again within such a short space of time proves that the last change in December was rushed and not thought through. I remember thinking at the time that the change seemed to come out of nowhere without even any rumours.
While this proposed new system does address some of the problems of the last one such as the problem with seventh place and increasing the relative gap between first and second, it creates some new problems of rewarding lower places more as the article points.
Although I understand that the points system has changed many times in the past, I am still against the points for a win increasing by 150%.
At least it doesn’t look like they will be introducing points for pole or fastest lap yet.
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
25th January 2010, 22:22
Yep – they should have stopped and done their sums before telling people.
Jim N
25th January 2010, 13:31
A small step in the right direction, but as you say winning is not well rewarded. In 2002 and before you needed a 2nd and a 3rd to make up the same points as a win. Even under the proposed new systen you only need two 4ths. Not a huge incentive. Still at least they have started to realise there is a problem, evey little helps….. mind you to get back to the 2002 ratios you would need a system like 80, 48, 32, 24, 16, 8, 6, 4, 2, 1
sato113
25th January 2010, 13:34
shame we won’t be able to put points scored in 2010 into a historical perspective. the ‘career total’ part of a driver’s profile will become more irrelevant.
Xanathos
25th January 2010, 17:24
It’s been irreleavant for decades, but with a new system it’ll be obvious to everyone.
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
25th January 2010, 22:23
Xanathos is right – that went out the window when they first changed the points system in 1960.
MEmo
26th January 2010, 3:23
Has nobody ever thought about normalizing the values so that historically all drivers can be compared? Kinda like the Castrol rankings but for the points systems?
gabal
26th January 2010, 8:07
it is irrevalent now as well – there has hardly been an unique system since 1950. We will just have to rely on more comparable results – wins and podium finishes.
Ronman
25th January 2010, 13:38
As long as the difference between 1st and second is big, and will require for the 2nd to push for a win rather than settle…
CounterStrike
25th January 2010, 14:41
I think the 10-6-4-3-2-1 was perfect.
It was scrapped to tighten the fight when introduced in 2003. It was successful, Kimi lost the title only by two points & the top 3 constructors were seperated by less than 15 points.
Time we revert back to that. this system is unfair on the drivers from the past.
Ino
25th January 2010, 13:40
I would have preferred something with a smaller maximum of points awarded. I’m just thinking of all the point-scoring records that have suddenly become irrelevant.
DanThorn
25th January 2010, 14:43
They’ve been irrelevant for decades. The maximum points available in 1950 was 63 (54 discounting the Indy 500) whereas since the late 70’s the maximum on offer has been around 130-190 depending on the number of races. Add in other factors such as the number of points-scoring positions, reliability of cars and the early timing innacuracies and you see that points totals are pretty much meaningless. Jarno Trulli has scored almost as many points as Fangio but it has no reflection at all on their respective driving abilities.
Lustigson
25th January 2010, 13:49
This 2nd proposal is better than the first, if only for the 8-6-5-3 bit that was plainly wrong.
I would vote for reverting back to the 10-6-4 system, though, with 9-6-4 a strong 2nd place, to maintain somewhat of a historical reference. But, with the 10-8-6 system of late, all stats are screwed up anyway, so they may just as well change it to 25-something-something, now.
wasiF1
25th January 2010, 14:06
Proposal 2 is worst than 1.I still think the FOTA point system was better.
Bullfrog
25th January 2010, 14:18
Good stuff, I like the seven-point gap between 1st & 2nd. The championship table will look weird for a while but we’ll get used to bigger numbers.
Very relieved they’re not changing the tyre stops, according to the last paragraph in the Autosport report.
Jay Menon
26th January 2010, 4:28
Yeah I like the points gap too. Makes a win more valuable.
This points system for 2010, will make the grid more competitive. There will be good racing throughout the field like what you see in Moto GP.
lehonardeuler
25th January 2010, 14:29
It’s definitely worse than the 1st proposal (except for the issue in p7): The sum of all positions adds up to 101, to the 95 of the 1st proposal.
My system: Since we are not giving “round” numbers to the first finishing positions, I think this system would look best:
25 17 12 9 7 5 4 3 2 1
2nd to 1st ratio: 68% (60% in 2002, 80% in 2009, 80% in 2010 1st proposal)
3rd to 1st ratio: 48% (40%, 60%, 60%)
6th to 1st ratio: 20% (10%, 30%, 24%)
1st to sum of all pos: 29.4% (38.4%, 25.6%, 26.3%)
Maybe you could help me tweak this 3rd system :)
K
25th January 2010, 17:21
Comment of the day now can someone give this guy a job at the FIA please?
heliwave
25th January 2010, 17:23
The is the best system lehonardeuler, Hope some team members are reading these wonderful forums.
25 17 12 9 7 5 4 3 2 1 Best of the best
LehonardEuler
25th January 2010, 19:37
Maybe it’s good, but it has a major disadvantage: It’s easy to get confused.
What about this? Taking 25 points for a win, but keeping inside the current points system:
25 15 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1
or maybe taking 20 for a win, but not as rewarding as the 25pt variant:
20 14 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1
The 1st one performs almost as well as the old 10-6-4, and as well or better than the 25-17-12. But the 2nd one (20-14-10) it’s a bit more generous.
pros: Add just 2 numbers to the points system we all already know.
25basis: Very much like the old 10-6-4
cons: I don’t know if everyone like this distribution of points, p1 one is very much rewarded, as it used to be…
Again, historic stats are ruined, or should be adjusted in order to compare.
4th and 5th proposals are on! :)
LehonardEuler
25th January 2010, 19:39
one more con on them both: Points distribution (gaps) are not as harmonic as in 25-17-12
LehonardEuler
25th January 2010, 19:48
One last comment:
The 20-14-10 basis it’s somewhere between the 10-6-4 and the 10-8-6 (like the 25-17-12), since it would equal 10-7-5
dsob
26th January 2010, 9:09
I like your last one best, Fifth Variation, would it be? I would submit the following small alteration:
Make Fourth Place 7 points instead of 8. That puts a more definitive gap bewtween the Podium finishers and the also-rans.
The 20-14-10 is an excellent split for the Podium.
CounterStrike
25th January 2010, 14:37
This points system is unfair on people like Senna & Prost. Imagine a Button or Webber ending up with more career points than the golden four,Hakkinen & the others.
And what about Schumi? He could hugely benefit(I doubt he’ll score one though) to further increase his tally.
I say stick on to good old 10-6-4-3-2-1.
Dennis
25th January 2010, 15:53
I don’t see how it’s unfair to past drivers. If you want to compare their carreers you’re going to have to recalculate to the current value anyway. It’s harder work to compare them, but one point now has less value than it had then (or the other way around, might be easier). So when Senna won, instead of 10, you recalculate to 25, which is the current value of the win, nothing unfair about that in my opinion. By that logic it would be unfair to come up with any kind of change whatsoever because it might give someone a slight advantage. That way we’ll never move forward (or backward, depending on how you look at it). That argument is not valid.
I think this point system is better than the one they used before this and I can imagine why they want to change it. The smaller teams get more chances to score some points and there simply are more cars on the track, so you need more places to score points. I think this system is definetly an improvement to the previous proposal since the value of a win increases. Other than that, I don’t think it’s going to matter that much.
Rob R.
25th January 2010, 14:43
I wonder how many championships will be decided by one point now…
CounterStrike
25th January 2010, 14:45
Kovi would have been the 1982 WDC by a long way.This points system reflects poorly on the past champions.
Icthyes
25th January 2010, 14:47
Makes morse sense than the first proposal, but ut’s still ridiculous. It makes F1 look like a less prestigious series by counting down from 25 points, and is quite confusing to remember.
I recognise that with the level of competition and reliability the points system needed to be extended down to 10th, but they keep going about it the wrong way. In my opinion it should either be 20, 16, 12, 10, 8, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1 (doubling the previous system and inserting 3 and 1), or even better, keep it 10 for a win and introduce half points, so: 10, 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.5, 1, 0.5. Okay, it looks a little ugly at the bottom, but it’s a great compromise in preserving the old system whilst adapting it to meet new demabds.
See, no matter how we change the points system, the final results of last year stay pretty much the same in terms of order. But the problem with giving 25 or any number over 10 for a win is that a retirement when a championship rival wins is even more of a punishment, and in future if a leader gains a big points gap this way then they may be tempted to ease off and cruise to the title, and that’s boring racing. It’s not so much the gap between the points positions, but the number of points.
I think this is just another cynical move to artificially raise interest when it’s the racing that should be being improved.
iceshiel
25th January 2010, 15:25
Also in the same Autosport article:
“The SWG also talked at length about the possibility of introducing a rule that would force drivers to make two mandatory pit stops during a race, but this was not approved either. F1 drivers will therefore only need to make a single pit-stop in 2010 so as to ensure that they run on both types of tyres made available.”
David (not the same :p)
26th January 2010, 1:26
sweet
heliwave
25th January 2010, 17:25
25 17 12 9 7 5 4 3 2 1 Best of the best
CounterStrike
25th January 2010, 17:50
10-6-4-3-2-1 Best of the best
CRM
25th January 2010, 18:01
Absolutely no need for such a radical overhaul of the points system. I thought 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 was fine for a 26 car grid, but if there has be to be change why make it so mental going all the way up to 25 points?
What if Campos and USF1 do drop out? Then we will be left with a daft points system giving points all the way down to first place when there is only two more cars on the grid than last season!
I guess people who don’t like the new points system will just have to live with it, but bringing in points for pole and fastest lap will be going a step too far!
Daniel
25th January 2010, 18:06
F#@K the points, just race!!!
Brian
25th January 2010, 19:13
I’m a fan of any point system that leads to several drivers having a chance to win the WDC at the end of the year.
I just don’t want to see any of them run away with it too early in the season.
Daniel
25th January 2010, 19:28
Well, I don’t understand why do you think awarding points to the pole or fastest laps is that messy anyway… I think that a system that gives up on the magic number 10 for wins and ends up with a format in which the champion could score over 300 points during a season is much more complicated to me…
Anyway, I agree with many of the posts before mine that the old 10-6-4-3-2-1 was the best, and it could be adapted to a 10-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 if it were to reward the top 8…
I don’t believe that 8 drivers scoring points out of 26 is too few, in fact, I always thought that 8 drivers scoring out of 20 was too many…
Let’s not forget that the system in which only the top 6 scored was applied when the grid had 26 cars and worked quite well…
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
26th January 2010, 0:21
Here’s why: Four mistakes F1 must avoid
José Baudaier
25th January 2010, 19:55
If it was to increase the distance between the first and the second, it should be increased the distance between all positions, not decrease it. Anyhow, at least the infamous 7th position anomaly was fixed.
Geo
25th January 2010, 20:06
Toooooooooooooooo many points!
It just looks rediculous, like some 2-bit superbike championship.
13 teams = 26 drivers = 12, 9, 7, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1,
8 places get points.
The idea of giving points to 1/3 of the field is rediculous, doesn’t encourage development in the mid-table teams, and stagnates the sport. Moreover, it means we will always have the same teams at the top, unless a team writes off a whole year and spends 14 months developing it’s car (See Honda/Brawn 2009 car).
paul barton
26th January 2010, 12:24
Dude – it’s “ridiculous”! – are you a Ferrari fan?!
Rits
28th January 2010, 4:01
Whatever that meant, haven’t you ever seen typos before this…? Grow up mate! I’m sure there are a lot of Ferrari fans who are better at English than many McLaren followers… It doesn’t mean anything, so, keep it healthy here…!
Andreas
25th January 2010, 20:09
I like this sytem much more than prop.1. Now a driver can win 3 race’s and blow an engine in the 4th and still be sure of being number one.
rmonster
25th January 2010, 20:13
I kinda like that option 2 has a more significant drop in points between first and second ( I kinda agree with bernie that the winner of the most races should be champion and this would almost make sure the points could reflect that)
option 2 would also make it so chasing teams/drivers placing 4-6 would lose less ground in the points fight ( but it would also make it better for leading teams that want to dial it down a notch for reliability to end up in those spaces)
at any rate it will certainly influence the strategies
whatever is chosen will definitely impact strategies.
Piffles
25th January 2010, 20:51
The 2nd 2010 proposal is definitely a big improvement on the firt one, and a big improvement on the 2003-2009 system too for that matter (where the Championship went to the most reliable taxi driver).
Like others, I still think the 1991 system of 10, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1 is the best. If you want to have more points scoring positions without screwing up the historic 10 points (or 9) for a win, introduce half points with
10, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1.5, 1, 0.5 or go even further down to the back of the field with quarter points.
Macca
26th January 2010, 2:57
It’s a waste of time, I wish it would stay as last years points system. It would be more satisfying for the driver to actully score points that way.
When compared to last years results, it just shows how pointless the exersice really is, if it was brought in last year, with all the changes to the points system, the championship would have been exactly the same result for all the major players.
This is just a cheap way to try and drum up some interest before the 2010 season kicks off.
BNK Racing
26th January 2010, 5:30
hmm, proposal 2: penalise 2nd place while rewarding 4th-8th
makes sense doesn’t it? let the slowest points finishers get more points to encourage their mediocreness lol
how about proposal 1 whilst amending 7th place from 5 to 4 points
heliwave
26th January 2010, 10:34
How about giving the top 7 finished points and stuff the rest. & is a lucky number :)
Points: 10-7-6-4-3-2-1
Gaps: 3-2-2-1-1-1
Schumachers loves prime numbers not odd numbers so if he wins the 8th title he has to make it 11th tile before his son comes and beats him.
This is the only way to get him into a taxi-driver mode :)
Ali
Platine
26th January 2010, 10:47
What about…
15, 10, 7, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
paul barton
26th January 2010, 12:22
Isn’t the obvious solution to reduce the gaps by 1 each time? -6, -5, -4 -3 etc
rewards the winner most, 2nd quite well, 3rd OK etc – and goes to 10th in a smooth transition
So 25(-6) 19(-5) 14(-4) 10(-3) 7(-2) 5(-1) 4(-1) 3(-1) 2(-1) 1
25-19-14-10-7-5-4-3-2-1
Daffid
26th January 2010, 16:00
Better than previous proposal… but I’d still don’t like the obliteration of the old records it brings…
However, I always thought 9-6 was the best system, and this is closer to that than 10-8, so an improvement in that sense
Rits
28th January 2010, 4:02
“but Id still dont like the obliteration of the old records it brings”
– EXACTLY my point!
DGR-F1
26th January 2010, 17:14
I don’t understand why everyone appears to be supporting a change in the points system which will allow a driver to run away with the Championship right from the first two or three races in.
Haven’t we all agreed that close racing and a close Championship is much better, leaving the final race as the decider?
So if this proposal goes ahead, we will have to hope that there are lots of rainy races and that none (and I mean none) of the teams have it easy all season. Any team and driver who do a Brawn in 2010 will romp home to victory…..
paul barton
26th January 2010, 17:21
But conversely, Jenson won a bunch of races at the start of last season and was barely ahead. Fighting hard for first won’t happen if points for 2nd place is so close to 1st
Daniel
26th January 2010, 22:46
In fact, a system with a greater difference between 1st and 2nd always carries the risk of a superior team winning the championship with many races to go (Brawn-2009 was nothing compared to Ferrari-2004, Williams-1992 or McLaren-1988), but if, in the team, the drivers are on the same level, you still can have a fantastic season (1988 is the supreme examplem with Senna winning 8 races to Prost’s 7)
I think the system used from 2003 to 2009 makes the title fight last artificially longer (like Kimi in 2003, runner-up by only two points with a lone win, compared to Micheal’s six) and, worst of all, makes the drivers settle for second instead of fighting for the lead…
Chaz
27th January 2010, 18:52
lol my heads going to explode with this constant tinkering…
F1fan
28th January 2010, 3:46
I thot 2003- 2009 was fine. There was an urgency just to score that final point in 8th. It was fine the way it was.
az
28th January 2010, 3:47
Contrary to popular opinion, I would like to think that Pole and the Fastest Lap should be awarded a point each, it takes a hell lot of effort and should be rewarded imo… I can’t see how it would complicate the points!
Rits
28th January 2010, 3:48
Contrary to popular opinion, I would like to think that Pole and the Fastest Lap should be awarded a point each, it takes a hell lot of effort and should be rewarded imo I cant see how it would complicate the points!
Rits
28th January 2010, 3:55
But again, its already pretty annoying with the ever regular tinkering of regs and rules, they could atleast keep the points system stable… God! It’s like a new sport every season…we desperately need some consistency or else, soon there’ll be no meaning in comparison of seasons or drivers or teams based on performance (read heavier/lighter cars, double/single diffusers, KERS/no KERS, narrower/wider front tires, slicks/grooved etc. etc. AND varying points weightage….) DAMN!!!
puneet
4th February 2010, 16:21
The points system ensures that the driver with most wins will most probably walk away with the championship. However, the more interesting part is that it gives the other drivers hope that they can catch up with the leader. I think herein lies the moolah(money). A more interesting sport makes for greater viewership.
People who have been following F1 for a long time would not care too much about the points system. It’s not what draws them to F1. It’s more for the new audience. I guess it gives them something about….:)
cj
7th February 2010, 10:42
button would have won the championship by miles last year, and that wouldn’t be interesting at all would it?