Oleo wrote: ↑14 Dec 2021, 18:40
Big Tea wrote: ↑14 Dec 2021, 13:23
So many posters do not seem to get that this is not about Lewis v Max or Horner V Woolf, and it does not matter who was leading and who was 5 cars back, or what happened during the season.
The whole nub of this is that a race and championship was decided on the whim of an official who had written rules and procedures and he decided to ignore them for a lap of TV excitement.
We all know Merc is not going to get anywhere and now way is the race or championship going to be changed but the procedure has to be.
This time it was RBR and Max gaining at the expense of Merc and Lewis, if it happens again to could equally well be Mclaren and Ferrari in those roles, or any other team.
The only possible outcome is Massi will be 'promoted' to a different job and a new set of procedures and rules will be introduced for next year on.
Please understand this is not a driver and team v another driver and team this is fundamental to the fairness of sport for the future.
Agreed with this isnt about Lewis vs Max, Horner vs Wolf, Red Bull vs Mercedes.
However it is also not about excitement. Its about the essence of sport. The problem with a sport like this and f.i. football as well, is that you can not fit every situation into regulations, there are too many variables. So you always have to take the rules with a minor component of interpretation of why the rules are the way they are.
Like in football, a match takes 90 minutes. Except after 90 minutes they continue with a set extra time to compensate for the number of player substitutions and injury treatments that happened during a match.
Except then the referee has the option to continue the match even longer if during those few minutes there was a delay. Now if a deciding goal is scored in the 5th minute of 4 minutes of extra time, that totally sucks for the losing party, but its all in the game. The extra time added is often incorrect and an interpretation of the referee and his assistant.
Similarly in a situation as this one, one has to consider the necessity of following the exact safety car protocol vs the wish of all fans and teams to not finish any race under safety car conditions, whether it is the final championship decider or the 4th race of the season.
So there are the following considerations in any race where a safety car is needed in the final 10% of the race:
1) No one wants to finish any race under safety car conditions, if it is safe to do so. (has been previously discussed and agreed by teams). It is a race not a parade. (Teams know this and should consider that in their strategy choice.)
2) We have a safety car situation near the end of the race, can we safely get the safety car situation ended and get 1 or more laps of racing.
3) What is the normal safety car protocol, what is the goal of the various provisions of that protocol and is it necessary to follow through considering the agreed goal of not finishing races under safety car conditions.
So: Lapped cars are let through so they do not interfere with the race leaders during race restart.
The safety car stays on the track for 1 additional lap to allow these lapped cars to create a gap so they wont interfere with the race leaders within like 10 laps after the restart.
We can conclude, as race control did:
1) The track was safe in time for 1 final lap of green flag racing.
2) Considering there was only 1 more lap possible, driving another lap behind the safety cars is wasted time, since lapped cars do not need to create a bigger margin than 10 seconds. Therefore the standard additional lap of Safety Car can be scrapped. This provision is required when there is half a race left, but obsolete in the closing stages of the race.
3) The only lapped cars interfering with the race win were the cars between Hamilton and Verstappen, most other cars will not have a chance for the race win in one lap. To save time no other cars need to be unlapped. (One could argue that the cars between Verstappen and Sainz should have been unlapped as well)
Its super unfortunate for Hamilton, super lucky for Verstappen, but it is also a fair decision under the circumstances and agreed principle of trying to not finish race under safety car conditions, choosing the spirit of the sport over strictly following regulations, similar f.i. to how Hamilton was not ordered to surrender his place in lap 1, because maybe Verstappens pass was slightly too agressive, while it was very clear that Hamilton gained a significant advantage by leaving the track.
Anyway considering Silverstone and Hungary and considering Verstappen leads Hamilton in poles, podiums, laps led and wins, probably the slightly faster driver/car combo across the season won.
Mercedes/Hamilton did not lose the championship in Abu Dhabi, they lost it in Monaco, Baku and Hungary.