"The “Canon Cripple Hammer” no longer exists and we don’t expect it to come back for a new product segment, especially one that will wear the Cinema EOS badge."
Everybody sees things differently.
A true "cinema" camera in my mind is something that would take full advantage of the image produced by the camera, done by the user, not decided by the manufacturer.
It seems that they put the raw option in these R-series so that we could have a fine H.265/264. That is good, but not enough. The raw files are just for show.
What makes the RED cameras special in my eyes is that you can have hundreds of stuff on your timeline and your computer still works, thanks to the compression.
If Canon didn't have one, then yes. The sad thing is that they do but they kept it only for the C80 and above. If a camera is called Cinema, it should have 12-bit Cinema RAW Light LT. The camera can capture it, but the manufacturer doesn't put it so that the R1 cannot beat the C80. On paper it does, but it remains on paper.
I can put a variable ND on a matte box, I can put a 2000nits of brightness monitor on top of an R1, but I cannot use files that are 1600 Mbps bitrate. Look at the bitrate of RED, Pyxis and the C80.
1600 Mbps is only for show. "Look, my camera can do 6K RAW (29.97p): at 2000 Mbps; but can it do 6000 x 3164 / 25P at 576 Mbps? The answer is no.