After I've had a few hours to reflect here are some of my random thoughts on the season and the current state of F1 in general:
I think what is lost in the controversy today is that the changes made to the Abu Dhabi circuit did wonders for its raceability. Historically it has been one of the duller races with no overtaking opportunities. I remember the 4 way title fight in 2010 - Alonso couldn't make any passes with a faster car. In 2016 Hamilton drove super slow to back up Rosberg, and Rosberg couldn't make a pass, nor could the cars behind him.
Now about that finish - I think Masi could have handled the whole safety car period better if he would have been open about wanting to clear the back markers earlier. Saying no then yes with just 1 lap remaining seems like he was manipulating the outcome. Since Liberty Media bought F1 from Bernie, there have been a lot of WWF type moments, and this is one of them. I have no love for them, but Bernie and Max Mosely on the FIA side ran a tight ship w/ F1 (other than the obvious favoritism to Ferrari). Now in some sense it's become a show more than a sport.
Despite what I think about the finish I'm glad Schumacher still holds the record of 7 titles. He was a special talent. If you haven't watched the Netflix film Schumacher, do so.
23 races is too many. I think the sweet spot is 18-20 races in a season.
The cars are too long and too heavy. I know they won't bring back refueling due to their desire to 'go green', but they need to do something. The cars are longer than a full size SUV now, and weights have gone from 600kg to 750kg in the last 13 years, and next year they'll be almost 800kg.
F1 cars have had flat bottoms since 1983. 2022 will see that change with the return of ground effect Venturi tunnels or underwings. This is long overdue as the cars are way too dependent on overbody downforce. Adrien Newey is heralded as the biggest aero genius in the sport, so unless there is some loophole found by another team I would expect Red Bull to come out w/ the best aero package. I still don't see anyone challenging the Mercedes engine though. There should also be a significant suspension shake up with the 18 inch wheels - that's another opportunity for teams to make gains.
I wonder how Red Bull taking over for Honda on engine development is going to go. I assume they just hired all of the Honda team.