Not saying that Max doesn't have an asterisk. Saying it would be there regardless of who won. And sure, you see it as a smaller one, because you care less about mid-season rule changes and well, they benefitted your team. So I regard those differently, because my opinion on both those grounds is different. And sure, the perception with the larger public may be different because the last race incident was very visible, while the rule changes were more subtle (and the impact hard to quantify). Doesn't mean it wasn't there.AeroDynamic wrote: ↑16 Feb 2022, 16:11As I anticipated though, a lot of your posting is derived out of "Max doesn't have an asterisk on his Championship triumph. The Championship is decided throughout the season. Hamilton..."
what has any of that got to do with what went wrong in the part of Masi?
I don't see where Hamilton's championship would come with a Huge Asterisk. A smaller one than Max's I would say. About as small as Nico Rosbergs in 2016?? and arguably that doesn't have an asterisk.
If you crash, or get crashed into, (not deliberately at least) or your engine fails.. or something fails.. that's motorsports. that is what you sign up for.
In no sport, is rule breaking and rule officiating failures ever part of the game. That is an asterisk. So is Spa. Suddenly we want to justify this result because one driver had a bit more bad luck on track? even though you can argue he had plenty luck off track with the rules from Masi, and the change of regulations that season which brought the better performance to his car.
too many drivers have lost titles they couldve/shouldve won but took a loss. We aren't going to start making dodgy results 'okay' on the basis of how much bad luck you had before. In that case, we should refuse to respect a number of title wins from other drivers... jut no.
And once again, I am not trying to make dodgy results ok. I never said they were ok. I've been clear that I think Hamilton deserved to win the race, and Verstappen deserved to win the championship overall considering all controversial FIA decisions. That doesn't mean that they literally cancel eachother out; every dodgy decision in itself is one too many.
But all of this is a detour from what we were actually discussing, which is the role of Wheatley. And there my point has been made. You can't blame Wheatley for making suggestions on the radio, because everyone was doing it. The principle of lobbying is problematic, not a single occasion based on the perceived outcome. You also cannot blame Wheatley for Masi making a wrong decision. The decision was wrong because it was against the rulebook, regardless of whether it was or was not influenced by what Masi was saying, and regardless of whether he even was saying anything.