Although not legal and should technically have a penalty, the overtake under SC is not really the big game-changer here IMO.
The last lap was not a legal lap as per the rules. This is what they will be pushing hard I would guess.
It's a perfect representation of the season and FIA's competence!El Scorchio wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 18:06Exactly. They just did what they always do and half arsed their own rules and fudged it. It’s a more farcical end to the season than any of us could have imagined!DChemTech wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 17:51Have to agree with you there. And just why. RB won on strategy if the regular restart procedure was followed, or MB won on strategy if they left the SC to finish, but FIA somehow made it controversial by screwing around with overtaking.El Scorchio wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 17:46It’s unbelievable that both drivers really behaved well and drive great races but the FIA still independently found a way to **** it all up and ruin the race and the season.
Verstappen and Hamilton should both hold their heads up high though. None of this was either of their fault.
If the race was 59 laps long then all the procedure can play out properly and although it’s tough for Hamilton, Verstappen can win controversy free. Masi was in a tough spot as the championship was resting on his decision, but he abandoned protocol out of desperation to get the mess we got.
Ah well. Hopefully the joker goes back to working on Aussie lawnmower racing or whatever he was doing before he was given a job he’s not capable of doing!
I think the (sporting) rulebook should be doused in petrol and burned. And rewritten from scratch by sane people.McL-H wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 18:04I believe someone should sit down with Masi and reflect on the decisions he made. Give him some insight into his actions so he can learn not to make these mistakes again. I believe he is a good guy that can improve himself as race director. I am not for firing him. It is a tough spot to fulfil and letting him go is not a guarantee for a better future.
That's not true. A driver can pass a another car in front of him during a safety car, as long as he gives the position back immediatly. I could show you probably a dozen of such incidents which happend over the years and none of them ever got penalized. I only remember one case which was penalized, that was now more then 27 years ago and is today generally regarded as a mistake by some overambitious stewards.oT v1 wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 18:09Huh? No Ryar, he’s not allowed to go past him at all. No overtaking before the safety car line. Lewis becomes the ‘pace car’ before the restartRyar wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 18:04An overtake under SC, is a position gained. Did Max gain position under SC? No. Has that happened in the past where under safety car, the car ahead and behind are side by side, or nose ahead of car behind? Yes. DId the leader not start in his position when it was a go? Yes he did.
If they had crossed the safety car line at that point who would be the one crossing it first?
If it goes to court it’s an open and shut case. The very second Masi allowed lapped cars to pass the rules are crystal clear it must end under a SC. There is no grey area.gshevlin wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 18:35First off, you really don't want F1 affairs and events to be subjected to any external justice system. Every time an F1 team owner has appeared or been involved in a court case, they have come across as duplicitous and shady, and the courts have commented on that.
That is before you consider that allowing commercial litigation to occur could effectively "freeze" disputed championship results for years. The wheels of justice do grind, but they grind very slowly.
If Mercedes is going to appeal on the grounds that not all cars were allowed to unlap themselves, I do not see this as a winning argument from a result perspective. The Race Director moved all cars between Verstappen and Hamilton out of the way with his instruction. Moving the remaining lapped cars out of the way would not have had any impact on the contest between Verstappen and Hamilton.
Getting the result changed after the fact will be extremely damaging for the FIA and the sport, but arguably we are here because the FIA did NOT utilize that power in the past when F1 races were decided in an odd or unsporting fashion. The stakes are high here. If the FIA does change the result, Red Bull may withdraw. They do not need F1 in any commercial sense. Equally, if the result is not changed, Mercedes could withdraw, since they have had 7 years of continuous dominance. They may feel that they have reached the point (like today) where they can only generate headlines if they do NOT win.
The question then becomes what constitutes an "overtake"? Technically, putting your wing in front DOES constitute an overtake...but under SC conditions? esp. if you give it back after 1 second?dans79 wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 18:26Ryar wrote: ↑12 Dec 2021, 18:04An overtake under SC, is a position gained. Did Max gain position under SC? No. Has that happened in the past where under safety car, the car ahead and behind are side by side, or nose ahead of car behind? Yes. DId the leader not start in his position when it was a go? Yes he did.
that's now what the rules say.
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -12-08.pdf
48.8With the exception of the cases listed under a) to h) below, no driver may overtake another car
on the track, including the safety car, until he passes the Line (see Article 5.3) for the first time
after the safety car has returned to the pits.