AeroDynamic wrote: ↑02 Feb 2022, 15:18
You're conflating what I said as "Charlie was perfect" and then accusing me of having selective memory. Let me reiterate: It was not as bad under Charlie, and Charlie got a lot more things right consistently than Masi has. Things have become a lot worse, to the point where Masi's credibility has crumbled, and along with it, the sports credibility. His position is deemed untenable by a number of teams and personal in the scene. This wasn't happening under Charlie, was it?
I totally disagree on the consistency. All the driving each other off the track and then the moving under breaking stuff lasted under Charlie for several races/years. There was not a glimpse of consistency.
The BIG difference is that we did not have over many years:
- Two drivers from different teams fighting for the title with methods "till the first blood"
- Races being cancelled completely due to rain
- Everything made worse in the external communication by transmitting team principals shouting at the race director
So the question "This wasn't happening under Charlie, was it?" does not make much sense, he was never in such a situation and every time it was remotely close like Vet vs. Alo it also had controversial decisions.
Or the Ver vs. Vet or Ham vs. Vet examples when these guys stretched the rules a bit. Ended quite emotional...just with the difference that the teams did not openly lobby against Charly. But technically I see no difference to the stuff we saw this season.
AeroDynamic wrote: ↑02 Feb 2022, 15:18
I'm making the point that Masi is as much as the problem last year as the FIA structure and rules have been. He compounded them in that role. If we are going to do things better, we need someone stronger with an actual spine in that role, not an empty shirt. And then with a greater structure and more stringent rules in place, things can be good.
I agree. Still I doubt that only the head would have changed anything in the last season and that giving the Ham fans the head of Masi as an apology will bring them peace and us better racing.
AeroDynamic wrote: ↑02 Feb 2022, 15:18
And what source of yours says it was all on F1 for 'let them race' and nothing to do with Massi? it was a policy he adopted after being pressured by certain drivers, and we all know which one was leading that cause for his own agenda.
No. We are talking about a million dollar business with a clear "show" target. It is just naive to think a small guy in this show is playing his own agenda.
This fits directly again to the partial overtaking of back markers, of course this scenario was in the drawer before the race and discussed at higher levels.
AeroDynamic wrote: ↑02 Feb 2022, 15:18
This was proven when the drivers discussed Brazil with him, and he had informed them 'you may get penalised in some place for that and not in others'
I am still surprised that this falls on Masi. Can you explain this better? According to the appeal that was filed Masi gave the scene to the stewards and the stewards took no action, what is obviously nonsense. This is exactly what I mean with that the flaw is in the rules and not in the person.