Wednesday, 22 November 2017

Adversity test for England in Ashes defence



THE ASHES SERIES 2017-18
23-27 November 201700:00FIRST TESTBrisbane
02-06 December 201704:00SECOND TESTAdelaide (D/N)
14-18 December 201702:30THIRD TESTPerth
25-29 December 201723:30FOURTH TESTMelbourne
03-07 January 201823:30FIFTH TESTSydney
Dates and times are GMT. (D/N) Day/night Test.

ENGLAND begin their bid to keep hold of the Ashes overnight as the oldest cricket rivalry in the world resumes with the first Test at the Gabba in Brisbane.

Joe Root's men enter the latest edition of this perpetual contest confident in the knowledge that they have won four of their last five series against Australia.

However, three of those wins came at home - and the team's most recent visit Down Under, the so-called Pomnishambles tour - ended in a humiliating 5-0 whitewash to the Aussies.

Already this time, without a single ball having even been bowled, England have faced a few notable setbacks.

Most prominently, they are without the services of their best all-round player, Ben Stokes, following his arrest on suspicion of assault after an incident near a night club in Bristol in the early hours of 25 September.

Stokes had been named in the original squad in an announcement on 27 September which actually raised a few eyebrows on several counts.

But, following a review of video footage published in The Sun, the 26-year-old Durham all-rounder was withdrawn from the touring party "until further notice", pending an investigation.

Of course, there is still a chance at this stage that Stokes may yet play a part later in the tour if the charges against him are dropped.

The case against him is not clear-cut, with the Sun newspaper also publishing a later story in which two men hailed Stokes as a hero for protecting them from homophobic abuse on the night of the alleged assault.

For now, though, England must make do without him - or indeed his named replacement, Steven Finn, who was forced to pull out of the series on 7 November with a serious knee injury.

At least Root's men head into the winter having won the first two series under him at home this summer.

But, despite those victories over South Africa and West Indies, the same old batting problems persisted at slots two, three and five.

Dawid Malan, Gary Ballance and James Vince were all therefore rather unconvincing selections, particularly in the cases of Ballance and Vince.

Meanwhile, Mark Stoneman will be playing just his fourth Test when he takes to the crease to open the batting with Alastair Cook.

Stoneman has at least played himself into a bit of form already with a century and three half-centuries in the warm-up matches - and he certainly looks a far better bet than the painfully statuesque Keaton Jennings.

More worryingly, though, England have continued to struggle in adverse situations as a collective.

Indeed, it is something which has affected the consistency of their performances for several years now.

They usually either win handsomely or lose horribly with no middle ground, and often no sign of steel or fight in the players if they fall behind in a game.

Such weakness is exactly what the Australian pace bowlers love to prey upon. No one will ever forget the way Mitchell Johnson terrorised the English batsmen in the 2013-14 whitewash.

And, while Johnson has now retired, his natural successor - Mitchell Starc - warmed up for the series by becoming the first bowler in Sheffield Shield history to take a hat-trick in both innings of a match.

England simply cannot allow Starc - or Josh Hazlewood - to bully them in the way that Johnson did. They must stand up to the challenge that awaits, and perhaps they might just surprise themselves a little.

After all, it is not all doom and gloom heading into the Gabba.

There are, in fact, some genuine grounds for optimism on the basis that the Australian batting is not in particularly good shape either.

Just as England have Cook and captain Root as mainstays in the top six but offer little else, the Aussies appear to have an over-reliance on David Warner and skipper Steve Smith.
 
It would be fair to say then that there has been just as much head-scratching from the Australian selectors ahead of the first Test.

Unfortunately for them, though, their eventual decisions have gone down like a lead balloon among the press and public Down Under.

Chief among the grievances is the shock recall of 32-year-old Tim Paine, a wicketkeeper who played his most recent Test seven years ago.

Bizarrely, Paine has not even been taking the gloves for his state side, Tasmania, and his most recent first-class ton came back in 2006.

The umpteenth return of Shaun Marsh is not exactly the most inspiring news, either. Meanwhile, young Middlesbrough-born opener Matt Renshaw is one of six players dropped from their most recent Test, despite that being a hard-fought win in Bangladesh.

Former Aussie leg-spinner Stuart MacGill took to Twitter to refer to the selectors as "morons masquerading as mentors" while Australian Test Match Special commentator Jim Maxwell described them as "unhinged".

And so, there are already signs that, if Australia struggle in Brisbane, their fickle supporters could turn against them.

It is not just England who will be feeling the pressure. As such, it is essential that the tourists get a good start at the Gabba - though history shows that is far easier said than done.

The Aussies have not lost a Test match to any opponent on the Brisbane ground since 1988 - and England last won there on their successful 1986-87 tour, although they did secure a draw in 2010.

A strong start is vital then, especially in this particular series - as opportunity knocks in the second Test in Adelaide.

That match - regardless of what actually happens on the pitch - will go down in history as the first ever day-night Ashes Test.

And, of course, England hope that the evening sessions - with the pink ball under lights - will give their main man James Anderson the chance to swing the ball as prodigiously as we all know he can.

This time then, the Ashes could still be alive at Christmas following the third Test at the WACA in Perth.

Thereafter, the tour moves onto Melbourne for the traditional Boxing Day Test before the Sydney Cricket Ground hosts the fifth and final Test in the first week of 2018. 

In summary, this Ashes series appears to be a relatively evenly-matched contest between two sides which are still developing under the guidance of their respective young captains.

Unfortunately, that means home advantage feels as if it is going to be decisive with the hard, bouncy pitches surely favouring the Australian bowlers.

Indeed, if frontline pace pair Starc and Hazlewood remain untroubled by injury throughout the series, the Aussies could easily get on a roll against an England team still so fragile in adversity.

Certainly, this should not turn into another Pomnishambles tour - as, even without Stokes, England have the talent to play plenty of good cricket.

Nevertheless, it is impossible to escape the conclusion that Australia are rightly favourites to regain the Ashes urn.  

Prediction: 4-1 to Australia

ENGLAND SQUAD

Age
Tests10050HS
Joe Root (c)26Yorkshire601332254
Moeen Ali30Worcestershire44512155*
James Anderson35Lancashire1290181
Jonny Bairstow (wk)28Yorkshire45317167*
Jake Ball26Nottinghamshire30031
Gary Ballance27Yorkshire2347156
Stuart Broad31Nottinghamshire109111169
Alastair Cook32Essex1473155294
Mason Crane20Hampshire000-
Tom Curran22Surrey000-
Ben Foakes (wk)24Surrey000-
Dawid Malan30Middlesex50265
Craig Overton23Somerset000-
Mark Stoneman30Surrey30152
James Vince26Hampshire70042
Chris Woakes28Warwickshire180366
Ben Stokes26Durham39612258
HS high score   *not out

ASHES HISTORY
⚱️Overall series 69
Australia 32 England 32 Drawn 5
⚱️In Australia only 34
Australia 18 England 14 Drawn 2


⚱️Overall Tests 325
Australia 130 England 106 Drawn 89
⚱️In Australia only 162
Australia 82 England 56 Drawn 24


RECENT SERIES since 2000

Hosts
 Holder
2001ENGAustralia won 4-1 Australia
2002-03AUSAustralia won 4-1 Australia
2005ENGEngland won 2-1 England
2006-07AUSAustralia won 5-0 Australia
2009ENGEngland won 2-1 England
2010-11AUSEngland won 3-1 England
2013ENGEngland won 3-0 England
2013-14AUSAustralia won 5-0 Australia
2015ENGEngland won 3-2 England currently hold the Ashes

Thursday, 16 November 2017

World Cup playoffs: Arrivederci Azzurri, Ireland and Northern Ireland

WORLD CUP 2018 PLAYOFFS
09-Nov-2017Northern Ireland 0-1 SwitzerlandBelfast
12-Nov-2017Switzerland 0-0 Northern IrelandBasel

(Q) Switzerland won 1-0 on aggregate


09-Nov-2017Croatia 4-1 GreeceZagreb
12-Nov-2017Greece 0-0 CroatiaPiraeus

(Q) Croatia won 4-1 on aggregate


10-Nov-2017Sweden 1-0 ItalySolna
13-Nov-2017Italy 0-0 SwedenMilan

(Q) Sweden won 1-0 on aggregate


11-Nov-2017Denmark 0-0 IrelandCopenhagen
14-Nov-2017Ireland 1-5 DenmarkDublin

(Q) Denmark won 5-1 on aggregate


10-Nov-2017Honduras 0-0 AustraliaSan Pedro Sula
15-Nov-2017Australia 3-1 HondurasSydney

(Q) Australia won 3-1 on aggregate


11-Nov-2017New Zealand 0-0 PeruWellington
15-Nov-2017Peru 2-0 New ZealandLima

(Q) Peru won 2-0 on aggregate

ITALY failed to qualify for the World Cup for the first time since 1958 - and only the second time ever - as both Northern Ireland and Ireland also missed out in the playoffs.

Amid a series of low scoring matches, which - at one stage - featured six successive 0-0 draws, the Italians went out 1-0 on aggregate to Sweden after a deflected Jakob Johansson goal in the first leg.

Meanwhile, Northern Ireland can consider themselves even more unlucky having gone out to Switzerland by the same aggregate score as a result of a simply shocking first leg penalty call in Belfast.

Corry Evans was adjudged by Romanian referee Ovidiu Haţegan to have handled a shot from Stoke City winger Xherdan Shaqiri even though his back was turned and the ball hit his shoulder.

Ricardo Rodríguez showed no sympathy by dispatching the spot kick and then added insult to injury by clearing Jonny Evans' header off the line in the dying moments of the second leg in Basel.

Sympathy for the Azzurri and the Northern Irish must be tempered, though, by the fact that neither side managed to score against their opponents in just over three hours of football.

Yet only the most hardened football cynic felt no sadness at Gianluigi Buffon's fine international career ending like this.

Daniele de Rossi and Andrea Barzagli have also retired from national duty, the former having unsuccessfully implored 69-year-old head coach Gian Piero Ventura to bring on striker Lorenzo Insigne.

Unsurprisingly, Ventura has now been sacked by the Italian FA - and, having been a thoroughly uninspiring choice in the first place, the Azzurri's oldest-ever head coach holds a reputation which is the equivalent to that of Steve McClaren among England supporters.

By contrast, Northern Ireland boss Michael O'Neill is held in rather higher esteem having reinvigorated football in the province.

Under O'Neill, the Northern Irish have risen from 88th in the world rankings from when he took over in 2011 to a current position of 20th. Along the way, they also reached the last 16 of Euro 2016.

Of course, the 48-year-old's achievements have not gone unnoticed and it would be no surprise if he now looked for a different challenge. Managerless Scotland are said to be interested.

O'Neill's namesake on the south of the Irish border, Martin, also holds a contract for the Euro 2020 qualifiers - but he now faces a challenge of a different kind after a crushing playoff defeat.

The Irish appeared to be on course to qualify against Denmark having backed up their 0-0 draw in Copenhagen with an early goal in Dublin from Shane Duffy.

From that point onwards, though, it all went wrong as Tottenham Hotspur attacking midfielder Christian Eriksen took advantage of some slack defending to score a hat-trick in a 5-1 win.

An unfortunate own goal by Cyrus Christie began the rout before Eriksen hit a trio of wonderful strikes either side of half time.

Nicklas Bendtner then finished off a horrible night for Ireland by winning and scoring a 90th-minute penalty after he had been fouled by West Bromwich Albion winger James McClean.

Elsewhere, the playoff between Croatia and Greece was a straightforward affair.

The Croatians cruised through to make it an impressive 10 successful World Cup and European Championship qualifying campaigns out of 12, since the country gained independence in 1993.

Luka Modrić, Nikola Kalinić, Ivan Perišić, and Andrej Kramarić all found the net in a 4-1 win in Zagreb as a dreadful Greek defensive performance effectively ended the tie inside the first 90 minutes.

This was, nevertheless, a sharp improvement for Greece on their abysmal qualifying effort for Euro 2016 when they finished bottom of their group, and were beaten home and away by the Faroe Isles.

Outside of Europe, Australia took the penultimate World Cup finals spot yesterday after beating Honduras 3-1 in Sydney.

Captain Mile Jedinak scored a second half hat-trick - including two penalties - to settle a tie which had been, up until that point, a finely-balanced encounter following three goalless halves.

The Socceroos certainly appear to have benefited from their move in 2006 into the more competitive Asian confederation. Indeed, World Cup 2018 will be the Australians' fourth finals in a row.

Peru, by contrast, have qualified for the first time since 1982, taking the last place on offer with a 2-0 win over New Zealand in Lima.

Goals in each half - from Jefferson Farfan and Christian Ramos - were enough for the Peruvians to progress, the first leg in Wellington having finished in stalemate.

So, with the identity of all 32 qualified teams now known, it is worth looking at just how the finals draw could work out.

Hosts Russia and holders Germany are seeded along with Brazil, Portugal, Argentina, Belgium, Poland, and France in pot one (see below).

Then, unlike some previous World Cup editions which were split geographically, the remaining pots are also simply based on the teams' FIFA World Ranking from last month.

Ranked 12th in October, England are in pot two, and are joined by 2010 winners Spain, as well as Peru, Switzerland, Colombia, Mexico, Uruguay, and Croatia.

The Three Lions therefore will definitely face a seeded team in group phase - but will avoid all of those other sides in the second pot.

As in previous tournaments, two countries from the same confederation cannot be drawn against each other, with the exception of UEFA teams due to the number of participants from Europe.

Under the same principle, there also cannot be a group which has three or four UEFA teams in it.

Consequently, England could possibly face Brazil, Sweden and Nigeria in their group - or there could be an early reunion with Euro 2016 conquerors Iceland who are in pot three.

Alternatively, Gareth Southgate's men could be pitted against Poland, Tunisia and Panama, a selection which he would surely take in his first campaign as England boss.

Regardless, we will all find out soon enough. The finals draw will take place on Friday 1 December at the Kremlin Palace in Moscow.

The tournament itself will begin on 14 June 2018 with the Russians' opening group game.

(Q) WORLD CUP 2018 QUALIFIERS (Q)
Russia, Brazil, Iran, Japan, Mexico, Belgium, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Germany, England, Spain, Nigeria, Costa Rica, Poland, Egypt, Iceland, Serbia, France, Portugal, Uruguay, Argentina, Colombia, Panama, Senegal, Morocco, Tunisia, Switzerland, Croatia, Sweden, Denmark, Australia, Peru


POT ONEWRDate of (Q)Method of (Q)
Best
(Q) RUSSIA6502-Dec-2010Selected as hosts
SF*
(Q) GERMANY105-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group C
W
(Q) BRAZIL228-Mar-2017Winner of CONMEBOL
W
(Q) PORTUGAL310-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group B
SF
(Q) ARGENTINA410-Oct-2017Third place in CONMEBOL
W
(Q) BELGIUM503-Sep-2017Winner of UEFA Group H
SF
(Q) POLAND608-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group E
SF
(Q) FRANCE710-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group A
W






POT TWOWRDate of (Q)Method of (Q)
Best
(Q) SPAIN806-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group G
W
(Q) PERU1015-Nov-2017Playoff winner
QF
(Q) SWITZERLAND1112-Nov-2017Playoff winner
QF
(Q) ENGLAND1205-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group F
W
(Q) COLOMBIA1310-Oct-2017Fourth place in CONMEBOL
QF
(Q) MEXICO1601-Sep-2017Winner of CONCACAF
QF
(Q) URUGUAY1710-Oct-2017Runner-up in CONMEBOL
W
(Q) CROATIA1812-Nov-2017Playoff winner
SF






POT THREEWRDate of (Q)Method of (Q)
Best
(Q) DENMARK1914-Nov-2017Playoff winner
QF
(Q) ICELAND2109-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group I
Debut
(Q) COSTA RICA2207-Oct-2017Runner-up in CONCACAF
QF
(Q) SWEDEN2513-Nov-2017Playoff winner
RU
(Q) TUNISIA2811-Nov-2017Winner of CAF Group A
1R
(Q) EGYPT3008-Oct-2017Winner of CAF Group E
1R
(Q) SENEGAL3210-Nov-2017Winner of CAF Group D
QF
(Q) IRAN3412-Jun-2017Winner of AFC Group A
1R






POT FOURWRDate of (Q)Method of (Q)
Best
(Q) SERBIA3809-Oct-2017Winner of UEFA Group D
SF~
(Q) NIGERIA4107-Oct-2017Winner of CAF Group B
2R
(Q) AUSTRALIA4315-Nov-2017Playoff winner
2R
(Q) JAPAN4431-Aug-2017Winner of AFC Group B
2R
(Q) MOROCCO4811-Nov-2017Winner of CAF Group C
2R
(Q) PANAMA4910-Oct-2017Third place in CONCACAF
Debut
(Q) SOUTH KOREA6205-Sep-2017Runner-up in AFC Group A
SF
(Q) SAUDI ARABIA6305-Sep-2017Runner-up in AFC Group B
2R

Key
WR Pots determined by FIFA World Ranking in October 2017
UEFA
Europe CONMEBOL South America CONCACAF North America AFC Asia CAF Africa
W Winners RU Runner-up SF Semi finals QF Quarter finals 2R Round of 16 1R First round

* as Soviet Union  ~ as Yugoslavia

Saturday, 11 November 2017

Lest we forget

🕚
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn

At the going down of the sun...
And in the morning...
We will remember them
www.britishlegion.org.uk
1914-1918

Thursday, 2 November 2017

High-rolling Hamilton completes his quadruple

FORMULA ONE WORLD CHAMPIONS Four times or more
7 Michael Schumacher (Ger)Germany1994, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004
5 Juan Manuel Fangio (Arg)Argentina1951, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957
4 Alain Prost (Fra)France1985, 1986, 1989, 1993
4 Sebastian Vettel (Ger)Germany2010, 2011, 2012, 2013
4 Lewis Hamilton (Gbr)United Kingdom2008, 2014, 2015, 2017

LEWIS HAMILTON may have secured his latest world title in inauspicious circumstances on Sunday after being lapped and finishing down in ninth place in the Mexican Grand Prix.

But his achievement in having reached the summit of his sport - again - has sealed his place as a legend of Formula One.

Mercedes man Hamilton joins Alain Prost and contemporary rival Sebastian Vettel on four Drivers' Championships. Only Michael Schumacher and Juan Manuel Fangio have more.

Yet, at certain stages of the season, it looked as if it might be Vettel joining Fangio on five, as Ferrari produced a far more impressive car than in recent years.

After the Monaco Grand Prix in late-May, Vettel enjoyed a healthy 25-point lead, the exact equivalent of a whole race win.

And, even after both drivers had endured an indifferent summer, the German still led Hamilton at the four-week break by 14 points.

The autumn, though, was an entirely different story as Vettel imploded and Hamilton ignited his challenge with five wins out of six.

In Singapore, Vettel qualified on the pole - but, at the start, he and team mate Kimi Räikkönen squeezed the Red Bull of Max Verstappen, causing the Dutchman to touch Räikkönen.

The collision sent the Finn out of control and he hit the left sidepod of his team mate Vettel's car, causing major damage to both.

None of the three drivers involved completed a lap, while Hamilton - who had qualified fifth - picked up a fortunate victory, a third win in a row.

Two weeks later in Malaysia, Ferrari again had the fastest car - but an engine problem in qualifying consigned Vettel to the back of the grid.

And, although the German recovered to fourth, Hamilton took a surprise second to extend his lead to 34 points.

Remarkably, in Japan, Vettel retired early again - on that occasion due to a spark plug failure - and the Mercedes man Hamilton took full advantage with another race victory.

The championship lead was up to 59 points - and, at the following race in the United States, Mercedes were crowned Constructors' champions for a fourth successive year.

That achievement should not be understated for it came despite a whole raft of technical changes at the start of the 2017 season.

Indeed, it would also be wrong to suggest Hamilton and Mercedes have solely relied on the misfortune of Vettel for their success.

As Andrew Benson, chief correspondent for the BBC website, explained: "Of [Hamilton's] nine wins, at least three were of the very highest calibre, and in very different ways.

"He fought back to catch and pass Vettel in Spain, held off a faster Ferrari in Belgium, and came through against the odds with pace his team did not know they had in wet-dry Singapore. Three others - in Britain, Italy and the United States - were utterly dominant."

Of course, Hamilton will never be universally popular. Off the track, he is a self-styled high-roller, seemingly hopping from one celebrity bash to the next. One week he is hanging with Mo Farah, the next week with Usain Bolt.

He scored a big own goal when he was the only one of the 20 Formula One drivers who refused to take part in an event in London in the run-up to the British Grand Prix.

Meanwhile, on the track, he has gained a reputation for pettiness, badly damaging his longstanding friendship with Nico Rosberg in last year's tussle for the title.

Even on Sunday, Hamilton immediately speculated Vettel had hit him on purpose at the third corner, though the racing incident had done no favours for the German either.

Vettel ultimately finished fourth, well short of the required second place - which was guarded in any case by Hamilton's loyal Finnish team mate Valtteri Bottas.

Red Bull's Verstappen consequently earned a merited victory, his second of the season and the third of his fledgling career.

But - despite a self-proclaimed "horrible" race in Mexico City - the day belonged to Hamilton.

He already had more race victories (62) than any other British driver in Formula One history anyway - and he also has the most pole positions of any driver in history with 72.

Now, most significantly of all, he has more world titles than any other Briton, surpassing Sir Jackie Stewart's three.

And so, if it was not clear before this week then it certainly is now: this is Hammer time.

FORMULA ONE 2017 Race-by-race
Date

HamiltonVettelHamilton lead
26 March
Australian Grand Prix2nd - 18🏆1st - 25🔽7
9 April
Chinese Grand Prix🏆1st - 432nd - 43🔼🔽Level
16 April
Bahrain Grand Prix2nd - 61🏆1st - 68🔽7
30 April
Russian Grand Prix4th - 732nd - 86🔽13
14 May
Spanish Grand Prix🏆1st - 982nd - 104🔽6
28 May
Monaco Grand Prix7th - 104🏆1st - 129🔽25
11 June
Canadian Grand Prix🏆1st - 1294th - 141🔽12
25 June
Azerbaijan Grand Prix5th - 1394th - 153🔽14
9 July
Austrian Grand Prix4th - 1512nd - 171🔽20
16 July
British Grand Prix🏆1st - 1767th - 177🔽1
30 July
Hungarian Grand Prix4th - 188🏆1st - 202🔽14
27 August
Belgian Grand Prix🏆1st - 2132nd - 220🔽7
3 September
Italian Grand Prix🏆1st - 2383rd - 235🔼3
17 September
Singapore Grand Prix🏆1st - 263DNF - 235🔼28
1 October
Malaysian Grand Prix2nd - 2814th - 247🔼34
8 October
Japanese Grand Prix🏆1st - 306DNF - 247🔼59
22 October
United States Grand Prix🏆1st - 3312nd - 265🔼66
29 October
Mexican Grand Prix9th - 3334th - 277🔼56
12 November
Brazilian Grand Prixtbctbctbc
26 November
Abu Dhabi Grand Prixtbctbctbc

STANDINGS
Drivers' Championship

PDriverTeamPoints
01Lewis Hamilton (Gbr)Mercedes333 (9 wins)
02Sebastian Vettel (Ger)Ferrari277 (4 wins)
03Valtteri Bottas (Fin)Mercedes262 (2 wins)
04Daniel Ricciardo (Aus)Red Bull-Renault192 (1 win)
05Kimi Räikkönen (Fin)Ferrari178
06Max Verstappen (Ned)Red Bull-Renault148 (2 wins)
07Sergio Pérez (Mex)Force India-Mercedes92
08Esteban Ocon (Fra)Force India-Mercedes83
09Carlos Sainz Jnr (Esp)Renault54
10Lance Stroll (Can)Williams-Mercedes40
11Felipe Massa (Brz)Williams-Mercedes36
12Nico Hulkenburg (Ger)Renault34
13Romain Grosjean (Fra)Haas F1-Ferrari28
14Kevin Magnussen (Den)Haas F1-Ferrari19
15Stoffel Vandoorne (Bel)McLaren-Honda13
16Fernando Alonso (Esp)McLaren-Honda11
17Jolyon Palmer (Gbr)Renault8
18Pascal Wehrlein (Ger)Sauber-Ferrari5
19Daniil Kvyat (Rus)Toro Rosso5

Constructors' Championship
PTeamPoints
01Mercedes595 (11 wins)
02Ferrari455 (4 wins)
03Red Bull-Renault340 (3 wins)
04Force India-Mercedes175
05Williams-Mercedes76
06Toro Rosso53
07Renault48
08Haas F1-Ferrari47
09McLaren-Honda24
10Sauber-Ferrari5