Did you know that the 2015 Formula One season is set to kick off this weekend in Melbourne, Australia?
Did you also know that Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton is the defending world champion, unseating Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel last season after the latter won the previous four world titles?
I ask this question because, apparently, a lot of fans of the sport have grown increasingly disenchanted with the lack of drama surrounding the world title picture. It’s a situation that has plagued Formula One for years, essentially boiling the question of who the next world champion is going to be down to who has the finest technology in the pits.
There have been seasons in recent memory that have provided semblances of drama—the 2012 season was arguably the last of them all—but for the most part, recent Formula One history shows a compelling lack of competition among rival manufacturers, turning past seasons into competitions between teammates. It happened last year with Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg and it happened far too frequently during Red Bull’s four-year reign in Formula One.
Granted, rules changes and the constant evolution of technology has largely contributed to the overall lack of competition in the sport. If one constructor found a way to improve its car that its rivals couldn’t or didn’t do, then that’s a great deal for the constructor. It’s not their fault that their competitors didn’t think of said technology in the first place. That’s what remaining fans of the sport would say and I get that.
But when was the last time they did anything like that to build up the drama and suspense in Formula One? Remember in 2007 when Kimi Raikkonen won his first and only world title in the most dramatic way possible? How about Lewis Hamilton avenging his 2007 choke job by pulling off a Raikkonen just one year later to win over Felipe Massa? That was spectacular stuff and you were at the edge of your seats the entire season.
The last few years? Well, not so much. This season? I’m not getting my hopes up.