There actually was a blue flag but I guess it's one of those things that's traditionally ignored in F1.
There actually was a blue flag but I guess it's one of those things that's traditionally ignored in F1.
Only thing won is psychological advantage to Lewis and Mercedes. Though it still seemed that way after Siverstone.Restomaniac wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 19:34Thing is it’s still a Verstappen win. Mercedes we’re probably favourites in Russia anyway.
Now if this penalty was on a later track? Different story.
I think they went for the undercut but mclaren reacted to their mechanics with their own.ArcticWolfie wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 19:43They tried to overcut him and messed up the pitstop completely...Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 19:37Despite the imo out of proportion penalty in comparison with Silverstone, Red Bull had it coming somehow. Why didn’t they do the undercut on Ricciardo? Did they underestimate the lap time advantage of a fresh set?
Do you have a link where he said that or is it just a lie?
Blue flags tell drivers that there is a car close by as well as the "get out of the way you're being lapped" that we see most often. Blue flags only mean "get out of the way" when a driver is being lapped. At the exit of the pit lane, the flag/light tells the exiting driver that there are cars approaching. If the cars are on the track where the pit exit lane is marked, the exiting driver has to let them go by before exiting the pits.
The favourite tag on Merc in Russia is placed on them by Red Bull. It’s a medium downforce circuit, and Red Bull has the best car at those circuits this year. Doesn’t matter what happened the years before.Restomaniac wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 19:34Thing is it’s still a Verstappen win. Mercedes we’re probably favourites in Russia anyway.
Now if this penalty was on a later track? Different story.
A penalty was given because one driver was found to more at fault than the the other. It wasn't a racing incident. Thus a penalty is due. As both drivers were out of the race it is only fair that the penalty due to the driver found to be most at fault is served at the next opportunity - at the next race.DChemTech wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 19:36
That covers it beautifully I think, although I am a bit more reluctant regarding the penalty - in Silverstone, the penalty was in place because one driver crashed and the other did not. Here, both were punished with their DNF. No need to carry it over to the next race. (edit: ok, Max would have done better asking for Lewis being OK too, overlooked that in the above)
https://the-race.com/formula-1/hamilton ... nza-crash/Roo wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 20:00you blame Max fine. Then you completely miss the time of events to construct a narrative101FlyingDutchman wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 19:38You serious? Please do explain what is shocking to you. As I can’t for the life of me figure that out
Max made those comments after his car had ridden over the top of LHs. You think that is unnecessary and childish? It's telling that his first comments was to shift blame, it wasn't a comment to accquire knowledge about LHs health or a comment after witnessed LH reversing. It's about your apologistic attitude to it when it's typical and not a one off. It's not childish at all, even now he's tweeted "Today was very unfortunate. The incident could have been avoided if I had been left enough space to make the corner. You need 2 people to make that work and I feel I was squeezed out of it. When racing each other, these things can happen, unfortunately"..
Yes, your comments are absolutely shocking..
RBR knew full well that Perez had to give the place back. They didn't tell him to do so becasue they knew that with his pace, he would cause issues for Bottas and hence reduce Mercedes constructors' points tally. The way that Bottas was catching the front runners it was obvious that he had a reasonable chance of taking either a podium or the win. Perez blocked Bottas from trying to attack the McLarens. It was a professional foul, in effect, because not only did he gain advantage over one driver by going off track, he ruined another's chances of a better finish. It's similar to RBR having Perez give up his own points in order to take the fastest lap away from Hamilton at Silverstone. It's legal, of course, but it's a little underhand.Steven wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 20:03Oh man the stewarding today...
Horner said race control did not tell them that Perez had to give that place back, so RBR "got their heads down" and went on with it (of course, they could've been smarter themselves, but anyway). And then, later, an investigation is launched and a penalty given.
Two problems here:
- The stewards' decisions are too slow
- RBR and Perez were just too opportunistic. Any reasonable person saw Perez gained the position by going off track...
Stewards don't decide based on outcome, only on actions.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 19:18Considering the 10s time penalty for Lewis got after the 300km/hour Silverstone incident (which RB also costs budget ánd engine penalty), this 3 place grid drop seems a bit odd, even tough it might have been a bit too opertunistic
Whole heartedly agree. I have experienced spinal (cervical? ) compression from out in the field and it isn't nice to say the least. Basically a tank lid weighning about 50 pounds bonked me on the head.taperoo2k wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 20:07A 3 place grid drop is about the right punishment for Max, he showed a real lack of maturity and
judgement there. He'd have been better off bailing on the move early and regrouping for another
overtake attempt later. If not for the roll cage hoop and the halo plus Lewis lowering his head, we could have been talking about something much worse. From what I've seen on twitter etc some are not really appreciating just how lucky Lewis is and how much trouble Max could have gotten himself into.
One thing that's always irritated me about Max is his expectation that other drivers will simply move out of his way, just because he's there. I hope Max will learn from this and improve as a driver, he's got some rough edges that could cost him this year's title.
The key issue appears to be that the move was undertaken too late. Max was trying to go around the outside, not stay around the outside. If they had been side by side all the way through the corner until the point of impact, I think Hamilton would have been penalised. But as Max tried to accelerate around the outside, they found Max at fault.Nathanael F1 wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 18:57Indeed. During the race, Brundle was talking about how alongside means the front axle of the car behind vs. the rear axle of the car in front.Vaexa wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 18:50The fact people here genuinely buy this ''Verstappen did it deliberately'' nonsense Hill and Herbert were paddling tells you all you need to know about the loyalties here.
I really like this paragraph from the stewards' document:
''But further, the
Stewards observed that Car 33 was not at all alongside Car 44 until significantly into
the entry into Turn 1. In the opinion of the Stewards, this manoeuvre was attempted
too late for the driver of Car 33 to have “the right to racing room”''
They must've been watching a different race today, I guess.
You can see here than Verstappen’s front axle is well ahead of the rear axle of Hamilton, well before Hamilton makes it to the apex of T1.
https://i.postimg.cc/pTgfXHKd/93-C9-C8 ... 124-FB.png
The stewards were definitely watching a different race if that’s their reasoning for the penalty.
Okay interesting view on Perez. It's practically two technical fouls this race. It made sense for Redbull to be penalized both for stopping Bottas and for stopping Lewis.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 20:08RBR knew full well that Perez had to give the place back. They didn't tell him to do so becasue they knew that with his pace, he would cause issues for Bottas and hence reduce Mercedes constructors' points tally. The way that Bottas was catching the front runners it was obvious that he had a reasonable chance of taking either a podium or the win. Perez blocked Bottas from trying to attack the McLarens. It was a professional foul, in effect, because not only did he gain advantage over one driver by going off track, he ruined another's chances of a better finish. It's similar to RBR having Perez give up his own points in order to take the fastest lap away from Hamilton at Silverstone. It's legal, of course, but it's a little underhand.Steven wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 20:03Oh man the stewarding today...
Horner said race control did not tell them that Perez had to give that place back, so RBR "got their heads down" and went on with it (of course, they could've been smarter themselves, but anyway). And then, later, an investigation is launched and a penalty given.
Two problems here:
- The stewards' decisions are too slow
- RBR and Perez were just too opportunistic. Any reasonable person saw Perez gained the position by going off track...