Since he started 'let them race' in 2019 and never knew how to control it or create boundaries around what that means and what the limits are..until.. it was too late and the drivers feedback after Brazil was embarrassing.
Since he started 'let them race' in 2019 and never knew how to control it or create boundaries around what that means and what the limits are..until.. it was too late and the drivers feedback after Brazil was embarrassing.
As terrible as the let them race nonsense was, his refusal to uphold the track limits, white lines regulations, and placing launch ramps and huge curbs just outside those lines was far worse. He was clearly not fit for the position.AeroDynamic wrote: ↑17 Feb 2022, 22:46Since he started 'let them race' in 2019 and never knew how to control it or create boundaries around what that means and what the limits are..until.. it was too late and the drivers feedback after Brazil was embarrassing.
Very informative and insightful video. If you jump to the 2020 season it shows how screwy, clumsy and dangerous manageing the SC becomes! It's shocking. In Spa 2020 they had nine marshals on track, two cranes and the medical car but no SC queue! Crazy! Masi definitely tried too hard to rush things at times and safety was put aside too much.
OK for anybody watching, you can watch parts on 2012, singapore 2015, 2020 and 2021 seasons. 2020 and 2021 are loaded with Masi Cock-ups. The most egregious is Abu Dhabi 2021 of course, where we see safety car being brought in BEFORE the track clear was given among other major cock-ups. Singapore 2015 is interesting only because some lapped cars were allowed to overtake, but it was a radio issue that lead to that.
Thanks for the breakdown PZ!PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑18 Feb 2022, 17:05OK for anybody watching, you can watch parts on 2012, singapore 2015, 2020 and 2021 seasons. 2020 and 2021 are loaded with Masi Cock-ups. The most egregious is Abu Dhabi 2021 of course, where we see safety car being brought in BEFORE the track clear was given among other major cock-ups. Singapore 2015 is interesting only because some lapped cars were allowed to overtake, but it was a radio issue that lead to that.
https://the-race.com/formula-1/f1-rules ... rule-axed/An expedited safety car restart process and the elimination of the long-established starting tyre rule are among the changes revealed in newly-published versions of Formula 1’s sporting regulations.
Singapore 2015 was a weird one, there wasn't a crash for the SC either so very unprecedented.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑18 Feb 2022, 17:05OK for anybody watching, you can watch parts on 2012, singapore 2015, 2020 and 2021 seasons. 2020 and 2021 are loaded with Masi Cock-ups. The most egregious is Abu Dhabi 2021 of course, where we see safety car being brought in BEFORE the track clear was given among other major cock-ups. Singapore 2015 is interesting only because some lapped cars were allowed to overtake, but it was a radio issue that lead to that.
This video is definitely the most comprehensive I have seen on safety cars, and pretty much removes any doubt about Masi's dismissal.
KeiKo403 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2022, 10:27As an aside though, I watched the full video and very early on in the video he says something about why cars are allowed to catch the back of the pack (I know rules around this have changed in recent years). Basically due to the safety car coming out if there was a 10s gap between 1st and 2nd the behind the safety car that gap is reduced to nothing then why shouldn't 18th be on the gearbox of 17th and 17th on the back of 16th etc etc. It is the only fair and sporting thing to do.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑18 Feb 2022, 17:05OK for anybody watching, you can watch parts on 2012, singapore 2015, 2020 and 2021 seasons. 2020 and 2021 are loaded with Masi Cock-ups. The most egregious is Abu Dhabi 2021 of course, where we see safety car being brought in BEFORE the track clear was given among other major cock-ups. Singapore 2015 is interesting only because some lapped cars were allowed to overtake, but it was a radio issue that lead to that.
This video is definitely the most comprehensive I have seen on safety cars, and pretty much removes any doubt about Masi's dismissal.
AD'21 is still a massive, and only(?) anomaly in terms of following safety car procedure.
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his 2020 imola and istanbul screw ups where all about the show/spectacle at the expense of safety.LHamilton wrote: ↑20 Feb 2022, 19:44I wouldn't be suprised if some of Masi's poor decisions were the outcome of the Owners wanting a 'spectacle' and entertainment. So before people rush into celebrations, let's see how next year pans out. If we see similar trends, then we might need to question on how much artificial entertainment the sport needs.