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Started a discussion here regarding whether or not we should consider Newey's involvement in the AMR25 in his career results. This should also have implications in the AMR25 infobox, where he has now been added as the technical director. MB243719:41, 4 March 2025 (UTC)
Verstappen 2021 ADGP
There is a discussion at Max Verstappen about a WP:SPAs (F1WDC2021) edits regarding the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, re-writing several sections of the article—including the lead—and writing full essays on how he was 'only the champion' because of blah, without citing any independent commentary. Tried to take this to ANI as this user has also done so at Michael Masi, Mohammed Ben Sulayem, and Abu Dhabi—was told to take this to the talk page instead and now I'm fairly sure I'm arguing with GPT. Need a consensus! MB243700:05, 9 March 2025 (UTC)
British nationality changes
Over the past two weeks or so, there have been widespread edits to change various driver articles leads and/or infoboxes to say English/Scottish opposed to British. This can be primarily seen on Damon Hill (-> english), Graham Hill (-> english), and Jim Clark (-> Scottish).
The infobox issue is easily revertable as vandalism; it is the parameter for their racing license, not actual nationality. However, I have looked and am unable to find a convention for differentiating from Scottish/English and British in lead sections. I assume that this is an unwritten precedent, but I am bringing this up for two reasons: 1) Is there a specific MOS, policy, guideline, consensus or written precedent that deals with this, and if not, 2) what is the right way to approach this besides reverting for vandalism and citing unwritten precedents? Should we try to achieve consensus here?
If this was an isolated incident I wouldn't really care, but it's been happening more and more recently and is frankly somewhat hard to justify constant reversions besides for edit warring, in my opinion. I could be massively overthinking this, but I atleast wanted to bring this to the WikiProject talk page. GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 23:21, 10 March 2025 (UTC)
It is WP:F1 convention to say British in the leads and infoboxes, followed by "from England/Scotland/Wales/Northern Ireland" in the lead. Generally, I have not included "from England" when writing leads as it sacrifices concision for something that is not contentious; just a lone IP being disruptive on the Hill articles. The precedent otherwise is a good one, as each of these drivers are notable for being British athletes. Clark has been a recurring issue. Semi-protection for articles such as Jim Clark and Jackie Stewart may be in order. The only exception to this has been Eddie Irvine, where the consensus—albeit an old one—is to omit British from the lead. MB243723:42, 10 March 2025 (UTC)
Let's make something very clear. Changing infoboxes to English/Scottish is not vandalism. Because they are English/Scottish. In the first instance it is a good faith edit. If they continue to do it it becomes disruptive. But at no point would it be vandalism. Claiming it is vandalism is both WP:BITING, and a failure to assume good faith. And when you do request protection, the admin may subconsciously not assume as mych good faith as they should. SSSB (talk) 07:01, 11 March 2025 (UTC)
You are right, I was using the wrong term. I meant it more so in a way that can be easily justifiable to revert, as there has been a written precedent for infobox to represent sporting nationality. Saying that it was vandalism was just a misphrasing on my part. GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 15:29, 11 March 2025 (UTC)
Note The convention only applies to drivers. Whilst I'd argue "British" is preferable for Ron Dennis, it isn't worth edit warring over. MB243723:05, 11 March 2025 (UTC)
Who are Red Bull Racing's current test and reserve drivers? The infobox at Red Bull Racing says "Test drivers: Yuki Tsunoda" but {{Formula One reserve drivers}} lists Sebastien Buemi and Jake Dennis. (I'm mindful of the fact that the situation may change before the Japanese GP, but I'd like to get the article and navbox consistent). DH85868993 (talk) 19:17, 25 March 2025 (UTC)
I believe Buemi and Dennis are the test drivers and Tsunoda is the reserve—at least to my knowledge. The "test drivers" parameter in the constructor infobox should probably be renamed to "reserve drivers"—or separate parameters for both—as that is all it is used for. MB243719:30, 25 March 2025 (UTC)
Pretty sure that the template covers all reserve/test/development, and not just reserve drivers (despite the name). If we remove Buemi and Dennis, we would have to remove Vandoorne, Juncadella, Yelloy, Fuoco, Rigon, Arthur Leclerc, Stevens, and Turvey. GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 15:34, 26 March 2025 (UTC)
The template should probably be updated to note which drivers are what, as there is a clear distinction between a test and reserve driver. MB243715:49, 26 March 2025 (UTC)
Footnotes would probably be the smartest way about it, rather than expanding the template to 2–3 sections. Could place (T), (D), (R), (TR), etc. next to drivers to signify their role. MB243716:16, 26 March 2025 (UTC)
Also, I may as well bring this up here, should we be classing Daniel Ricciardo as a "reserve driver" for Red Bull in 2023? Their chosen branding of "third driver" was both sensationalist and confusing, whilst being no different to a standard reserve role, which is the widely accepted term. It was only really used in the initial reports, which parroted Red Bull's press release, after which he was widely referred to as the "Red Bull reserve driver".MB243716:17, 26 March 2025 (UTC)
If we take precedent from Valtteri Bottas this season (Mercedes is labeling him as their "third driver"), then yeah, Riccardo would be classified as reserve for 2023. As you said, it's pretty much just a glorified title for the team's primary reserve driver. Pretty interesting that both Bottas and Riccardo were both 2nd drivers (kinda( who left their team on bad terms before coming back a few seasons later, and both received third driver branding.
Going back to the footnotes, I think that could work, but we should wait for additional consensus. The only issue that I could possibly foresee is that it's not always clear what the exact title is for some drivers. (ex: besides a team themselves, what's the difference between development and test?) GalacticVelocity08 (talk) 16:31, 26 March 2025 (UTC)
Our current convention regarding the 1980s Haas/Lola team is that references to the Haas/Lola team link to Haas Lola, but references to the "Lola" cars link to Lola Cars (sometimes via the redirect Lola Racing Cars).
The lead of Haas Lola states Lola however earned the team's points towards the Constructors' Championships as the team's designated constructor. It depends if we are classifying Lola as the constructor or Haas Lola specifically. MB243716:46, 27 March 2025 (UTC)
Just wondering if we could get a consensus for what we should do regarding the engines parameter in infobox F1 driver. This has been used inconsistently across the board and oftentimes serves little value as a WP:DIB. For me, the parameter should only be used when the engine suppliers are noteworthy to their career e.g. a factory-backed driver such as Takuma Sato, or the driver only used 1–2 across their career. Interested to see what people think. MB243716:57, 27 March 2025 (UTC)
This has already been discussed previously. The engine manufacturers do always have a direct and significant impact on drivers' performance and results (see e.g. this source), and otherwise have notable effects on drivers' careers even when they are not factory backed (see e.g. this source). Carfan568 (talk) 17:10, 27 March 2025 (UTC)
Where has this been discussed? The point is that having a comprehensive list of engine manufacturers does not always add to the reader's understanding of their career: it is often overdetail that is given in their results list anyway. The performance of the engine impacts the team as a whole, which is already listed directly above. If engines are important to a driver's career, they belong in the lead where relevant. It is hardly one of the most important points of Ayrton Senna's career that he once raced with Hart engines, for example. It convolutes his infobox without adding any reading value to his list of teams. MB243717:48, 27 March 2025 (UTC)
It does more or less always help the reader's understanding of their career. E.g. Senna having raced with Hart engines implies that he did not have the most competitive engine at one point. The above source even says that a team insider tended to think of Senna "as a Honda driver with a McLaren chassis". This was previously discussed here. Carfan568 (talk) 18:11, 27 March 2025 (UTC)
Those are very specific examples that do not justify a comprehensive list of engines. As I said above, if they are that noteworthy, they belong in the lead anyway. MB243718:28, 27 March 2025 (UTC)
A team with a front-running engine is a very different proposition to a team with an uncompetitive engine. This universally applies to all drivers. Carfan568 (talk) 18:39, 27 March 2025 (UTC)
Sure, but that's hardly obvious from the infobox. How is the reader meant to know if a driver was using a competitive engine or not? From the name of the engine alone? Is there something inherent about them that indicates how successful they were? Maybe you can say the reader should know them by reputation, but no supplier has consistently been at the back or the front – Ferrari, Honda, and Renault are all immediately obvious examples of engine suppliers that were either very very competitive or not depending on the time period. That's a shaky argument and doesn't plausibly hold up. 5225C (talk • contributions) 08:00, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
The same thing applies to the list of chassis makes as well; the point of these fields is more to provide a quick snapshot of which chassis and engine makes influenced the driver's results. And the infobox does also mention the years in which the driver competed, which allows the reader to deduce the reputation of the manufacturers at the time the driver competed. Carfan568 (talk) 10:38, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
The teams parameter isn’t there to indicate whether or not they raced for a competitive one, it just runs through their career path. The list of teams a driver raced for is of interest to a lot of readers, the list of engines is not. Google Trends shows over 12-times more interest in Michael Schumacher’s teams than his engines.
I honestly don't see any convincing argument why engines should be listed seperately in any drivers' infobox. Someone like Leclerc is notable for driving for Ferrari. He used that engine throughout his career because Ferrari has always used their own engines. The engines are thus not seperately notable at all in that case. All that has been brought here so far is personal sentiment of importance. Tvx1 17:19, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Leclerc also used a Ferrari engine at Sauber, where he was funded by Ferrari in his status as a Ferrari junior. I disagree that Mick Schumacher's engine is not noteworthy, as he was also at Haas as a Ferrari junior, who facilitated his move—his entire F1 career revolved around his place in Ferrari. Takuma Sato is certainly not personal sentiment: he was a Honda factory driver from kart racing and has never left. Forgot to add Yuki Tsunoda to the examples of current drivers.
That's my view anyway, I can also see a case for deprecating the parameter altogether, but certainly not for universally applying it. MB243717:30, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
I agree that the engines are certainly noteworthy in the above cases per Mb2437. Roughly half of the current grid have notable engine manufacturer connections besides being impacted by their performance. And a big reason why the chassis makes are there is because they affect performance, as evidenced by the chassis being listed instead of the team in cases where a driver drove for a non-works entry. Google Trends also shows that there is more interest in Michael Schumacher's engines than e.g. his fastest laps. Carfan568 (talk) 17:54, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Fastest laps fall under general stats, which are of far more public interest than his engines. (Michael) Schumacher's engines are not particularly noteworthy and just clutter his infobox. A big reason why the chassis makes are there is because they affect performance is not true; it is simply of interest to a lot of readers which teams a driver raced for. It is a poor indicator of performance for Fernando Alonso and McLaren, for example. We don't have years at specific teams included (unlike French Wikipedia) so using it as a performance indicator is irrelevant.
I'll note here that I have typically replaced chassis makes with actual teams for non-works entries, as it directly links to the team itself rather than a general unrelated article and the parameter is "teams" not "chassis"; I have retained "non-works" and "privateer" for teams who do not have their own article. If users are interested in their performance during these time periods—which will include engine information—then they can head to those articles, which is the purpose of an explanatory wikilink. MB243718:15, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
A lot more than fastest laps fall under general stats, so that is not a fair comparison. Overall Google Trends shows that there is a reasonable amount of interest in engines, even if not as much as teams. If you are concerned that including engines might somewhat clutter the infobox, we can always rectify that by using a template like collapsible list. Carfan568 (talk) 18:39, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
They are noteworthy, as evidenced by the sources and them receiving more interest than e.g. fastest laps. And you should not have replaced chassis makes with actual teams for non-works entries before gaining consensus, as this was against WP:F1 convention. Carfan568 (talk) 18:51, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Your sources are very specific and do not prove that a comprehensive list of engines is noteworthy.
I was unaware this was convention until recently. It seemed pointless to maintain links to unrelated articles, especially when it is not a "chassis" parameter. This has been uncontested for six months. Why—in the example of Stirling Moss—would we put "non-works Cooper, non-works Lotus, non-works Ferguson", when we can simply put "Walker", which is a far more detailed, concise, and relevant wikilink? It becomes a WP:DIB, as it also would if we had his full list of engines. MB243719:03, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
You cannot ignore that they receive more interest than e.g. fastest laps after using this as the metric for inclusion. The first source is also not specific because it shows the importance of engines in general.
Teams are not included in those cases because they do not directly impact results and performance like chassis and engines. Carfan568 (talk) 19:53, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Fastest laps is one of the primary statistics underpinning a racing driver's career, thus very much falls under "stats". Teams are not included in those cases because they do not directly impact results and performance like chassis and engines—what? The team's field chassis and engines, which are clearly explained on the wikilinks...
You're misunderstanding the purpose of the parameters. They are not there to indicate performance. MB243719:58, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
I already explained to you above why that is not a fair comparison. Seems like you just WP:DONTLIKEIT. "They are not there to indicate performance" is only your opinion. Carfan568 (talk) 20:05, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Except that I have provided data and sources to support their inclusion while you have not. It also received support in the previous discussion and others have added it to articles. Carfan568 (talk) 20:38, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Don't worry, I did the work for you. Both this discussion and this discussion were primarily people disagreeing with you and do not support your argument. I'm counting two for inclusion—including you as the OC—and six against. MB243720:54, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
You did not apply consistent logic to your data by ignoring that they receive more interest than e.g. fastest laps. And the general stats thing does not explain it away because a lot more than fastest laps fall under general stats. I also already previously stated that the discussion was held here at WT:F1. Carfan568 (talk) 21:06, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
They are one of the eight base "stats" of main concern, that we also use consistently throughout F1 articles. Either way, the data—which is limited—does not support your statement that engines are of wider concern.
Consensus is not a vote, but when there are three-times more people going against something, that generally means there is a pretty clear consensus amongst them. All three other users in this discussion do not believe a list of engines is crucial to state in the infobox, and two have disagreed with your notion that they should be used for the reader's understanding of performance. MB243721:25, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
In the first discussion one editor was neutral, one argued they "don't seem" relevant but did not offer a disapproval after their relevance was explained, one opposed including *both* chassis and engine, and two supported it. Especially considering that others started adding it to articles, I think there was some consensus to include it. In this discussion, Tvx1 based his argument on incorrect information by ignoring Sauber, and I think your logic for ignoring that engines receive more interest than e.g. fastest laps is questionable. Carfan568 (talk) 21:34, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Tvx1 expressed concern with the parameter universally, not just for Leclerc. Your argument was fundamentally flawed given it was built on an incorrect usage of data.
This conversation isn't going anywhere, let's leave it to other users; I have explained thoroughly why I disagree, and you are the OC of the parameter. MB243721:39, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
If you do the same search with Lewis Hamilton and use the widest time period, you can see that there is clearly significantly more interest for engines than fastest laps. I will also note that lists of engine makes can easily be verified by sources like this. Carfan568 (talk) 23:28, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
If you look back, Lewis Hamilton is one of the few examples I listed that could be worth noting. The Google Trends shows there isn't enough data to be considered statistically significant; there is no data between 2017 and 2020. It is also inappropriate to use such data for an active driver, as engines are typically of discussion during seasons—note the spike around the 2016 Malaysian Grand Prix and the 2021 São Paulo Grand Prix. They are unlikely to be searches for the list of engines he has competed with. MB243723:35, 28 March 2025 (UTC)
Doing the search with the terms "Senna engines" and "Senna podiums" again indicates generally more interest for engines. I think it is clear now that your claim that there is no interest for a list of engines is not backed up by data. Carfan568 (talk) 00:16, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
I changed it to show that engines not only receive more interest than fastest laps, but doing it with fastest laps or "senna engine" and "senna pole" also shows that engines often receive more interest. Carfan568 (talk) 00:43, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
I agree with Tvx1 and support the removal of the field entirely. The argument that some drivers are notable for their association with an engine supplier has some merit, but the nuance of "Mick Schumacher was associated with Ferrari throughout his career and drove for their customer team Haas as part of this arrangement" (for instance) is never going to be adequately communicated in a statement that says nothing more than "Engine: Ferrari". 5225C (talk • contributions) 02:36, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
And I’d say that Mick is more associated with the Scuderia Ferrari F1 team than with the Ferrari engine blocks. He was a Scuderia Ferrari junior driver and THAT is what helped him get that seat with Haas. The coöperation between Haas and the Scuderia is also much more comprehensive than just an engine supply. Haas buys every car part they are legally allowed to from Scuderia Ferrari. The situation with Hamilton is very similar. He is mainly notable for driving for the Mercedes F1 Team rather than merely for using their engine blocks. He’s literally in his first season not associated with Mercedes in any way. There just is no meaningful separate notability for the engines drivers use.Tvx1 09:08, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
Hamilton was (emphasis on the past tense) very unusual for having a long, successful career with a single engine manufacturer, which was the product of a set of historical coincidences (being backed by the Mercedes works team, which became their customer team, and then switching to their factory team). Even setting aside what Tvx1 has already explained, "Engines: Mercedes, Ferrari" does absolutely fuck all to explain Hamilton's history and connection with Mercedes. Likewise, Alonso's disputes with Honda and the consequences (which also affected McLaren's later entry into IndyCar) cannot possibly be expressed by "Engines: Cosworth, Renault, Mercedes, Ferrari, Honda". It's completely implausible to imagine that that is helping the reader. 5225C (talk • contributions) 12:44, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
The same arguments apply to the list of chassis makes as well. Listing "Teams: McLaren, Mercedes, Ferrari" does not explain Hamilton's history and connection with the teams because it does not differentiate between a single race or numerous seasons. Carfan568 (talk) 12:58, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
But chassis are different. Drivers are signed and drive for the chassis constructor. A direct relationship exists there. There is no direct relationship between engine and driver (the only counter-examples are drivers who are sponsered and/or supported by engine suppliers who were not also constructors). That is why I would argue that engine manufactors should not be in infoboxes, but chassis constructors should be - there is a direct relationship between drivers and construcors, but not between drivers and engines. SSSB (talk) 15:13, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
Sato is the exception rather than the rule, and my comment makes it clear that I am aware these exceptions exist. So I can only guess that you disagree about a removal for these drivers. Listing engine providers in infoboxes only for drivers like Sato would just be confusing as the infobox wouldn't explain this relationship. Not to mention that Sato's relationship with Honda is very different to a driver's relationship with a constructor. This sort of relationship should be limited to the prose, in the same way that a drivers link to a constructor via a driver academy is solely explained via prose. Because let's face it, Sato's relationship with Honda is more similar to a relationship with a driver academy than a constructor. Sato drove for the Constructors and was supported by Honda. SSSB (talk) 17:28, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
Sato’s case is actually very similar to the others named here. His relationship was with the Honda Racing Organisation, not just their engine department. Honda does more than building engines, they most importantly build cars. And their motorsports division enters cars and bikes in a myriad of competitions while indeed also supplying engines to some. In function of this they also have a funding programme for young drivers, Sato being one of them. After passages with others he actually ended up with the works team in F1 and later with their de facto junior team Super Aguri. That’s what he was notable for. Tvx1 18:05, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
Agreed with the proviso that this logic is more applicable to the modern era where teams must be constructors, and that MB2437 is probably right to include privateer racing teams in lieu of chassis constructors for older entries. Namelessposter (talk) 17:18, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
Nobody’s arguing that engines don’t impact performance, rather that the reader cannot reasonably deduce that from the infobox and the information isn’t critical to the driver’s career path in the way a team/constructor is. In many cases, it is overdetail that sacrifices readability. MB243715:58, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
If we follow this logic I don't see why we should include the chassis makes in the infobox. If Hamilton's infobox states "Teams: McLaren, Mercedes, Ferrari", the reader cannot meaningfully deduce how they affected his career. For example, he may have only driven a single race for McLaren, or he may have only driven one season for McLaren and later rejoined them. The rest of the article does a better job of providing this information. Carfan568 (talk) 17:22, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
As shown above, teams competed for are of significant public interest, and are listed universally in athlete infoboxes. Drivers also compete for teams/constructors/chassis, not engine manufacturers. You are still misunderstanding that these are not listed so the reader can meaningfully deduce how they affected career, it is simply informational.
The infobox lists the career span and teams, which should all be expanded upon in the lead and body. If engine performance/reliability is noteworthy enough at certain points, it will also be mentioned. I don't see any solid basis for including a comprehensive list of engines in the infobox. MB243717:31, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
We should include constructors because the drivers compete for constructors. They don't compete for engine manufacturers. Stop comparing apples and oranges. SSSB (talk) 17:40, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
The above comment applies even if we ignore the engine manufacturers. The rest of the article is better suited to providing the information. Drivers are also not employed by chassis constructors in cases where they drove for a non-works entry. Carfan568 (talk) 17:56, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
By your logic, the rest of the article is better suited to explain all of their career stats as well. It is a quick career summary; it is not there to give a comprehensive guide to the reader, just note down key facts and metrics i.e. they competed in x years, for y teams, and achieved z. Drivers are also not employed by chassis constructors in cases where they drove for a non-works entry. Which is part of why I changed non-works entries in infoboxes to link to privateer teams where possible. MB243717:59, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
There is nothing vague about the career stats, so your comparison does not apply.
Which is part of why I changed non-works entries in infoboxes to link to privateer teams where possible. Again, you should have sought consensus before doing this, as it was against WP:F1 convention. Carfan568 (talk) 18:30, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
It is vague without specifying the seasons and number of races. It is like saying Hamilton won races without specifying how many. And looks like the convention was recently changed to reflect your edits, but it still would have been appropriate to discuss it first before making the changes. Carfan568 (talk) 19:00, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
You seem to be confusing vagueness with contextlessness (is that a word?). There is nothing vague about saying Hamilton drove for McLaren, Mercedes and Ferrari. Meanwhile career stats are as contextless as listing teams. Sure we can say that Hamilton won 105 Grand Prix, but that doesn't tell us how we won them. We can say that Hamilton drove for McLaren, all that tells us is that he was employed by McLaren. We can say he used Mercedes engines, all that tells us is that his employer choose to use Mercedes engines. All of these lack context on some level. Frankly, arguing that we should include/exclude information based on context is a dead end and will lead to one exteme or the other. We should be making judgements on relevance to a drivers career. In the absense of context, listing constructors is effectively listing employers - a direct link to the driver, the subject of the article. Listing engine manufactors is listing who that employer outsourced parts to (or didn't outsource parts to) and has an indirect and frankly fringe relevance to the driver. Some relevance yes, but very little without addition context. SSSB (talk) 19:18, 30 March 2025 (UTC)
I agree with Tvx1 with respect to Mick Schumacher and echo that the reasoning applies to a lot of academy drivers who get placed with engine customers, like Charles Leclerc and George Russell. Very few drivers (Senna and Hamilton) have had relationships with engine manufacturers that go beyond the ties incidental to membership in a driver academy. But even then, I do not know why Senna's relationship with Honda or Hamilton's relationship with Brixworth should go in the infobox specifically when they can be addressed in proper depth elsewhere in the article. In Senna's case, having an engine section in the infobox might actually create more ambiguity on the Honda point because he also had a very good relationship with Renault, which powered him at Lotus, helped broker his move to Williams in 1994 by paying Prost to retire, and has been dining out on that relationship in Brazil ever since. Namelessposter (talk) 17:15, 29 March 2025 (UTC)
From what I can tell, it does not include sprint points/positions, although this can be inferred from the total points for the weekend. Also doesn't include poles and fastest laps. MB243717:28, 2 April 2025 (UTC)
I stated the reason in the template I added that you removed without fulfilling. "Does not list finishing positions of those who DNF, does not mention DNS, does not mention drivers' countries, does not mention pole position or fastest lap". Cerebral726(talk)14:00, 4 April 2025 (UTC)
Of course it doesn't list finishing postions of those who DNF and are unclassified. They DNF'd, they DON'T HAVE finishing positions. There is no case of DNS mentioned in those tables, so that issue is moot. Driver nationalities are already sourced earlier in the articles, so I don't see why that should be repeated here. It's easily verifiable. Likewise for the poles and fastest laps, which are already sourced in the article. All it would need is a source for the sprint results.Tvx1 15:19, 4 April 2025 (UTC)
Sources being available somewhere in the article is not adequate to verify the table. The table should be directly cited, which should be easy enough if they're already in the article. Cerebral726(talk)15:26, 4 April 2025 (UTC)
To be clear, I thought the DNS was in there earlier (when I originally added the template) cause of Hadjar's DNS which there seems to be some ambiguity around. That seems fine now to me. Cerebral726(talk)15:34, 4 April 2025 (UTC)
No. You need to read Wikipedia:VERIFY. There is no requirement whatsoever for the same information that is repeated to be repeated with the same supporting source each time. Information needs to be verifiable, not verified. Sections within an article are also not completely independent. Tvx1 00:21, 5 April 2025 (UTC)
I don’t see an issue with repeating refs if we can’t find one comprehensive source for this. MB243702:58, 5 April 2025 (UTC)
There is no issue, but there is no obligation as Cerebral suggests either. The information is properly sourced sowhere in the article. Tvx1 08:05, 5 April 2025 (UTC)
What I don't understand is: wouldn't it be a better use of @Cerebral726:'s time be finding and inserting sources, rather than debate whether it is a requirement or optional bonus? SSSB (talk) 09:00, 5 April 2025 (UTC)