PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑28 Mar 2022, 04:04
Reason why I say this is unfair is because remember before a SC restart the guy in second is normally waaay behind and the opportunity to close up is already a benefit. In a red flag restart too, the cars are spaced 8 meters. So it's unfair, it's dangerous and it's against the spirit of the rules to close up the way Max does to the point of being side by side. They should ban the practice and re-write the rules as soon as possible or else the whole field will be doing this.
ok, unfair I can sort of kind maybe agree, but dangerous? explain what exactly is dangerous when going side by side instead of being behind from your perspective please
this next will be kind of an extreme example, but still - do you remember Vettel following Hamilton and being behind him, (was it Baku?), then comes the corner exit, Vettel behind, anticipating Hamilton to start accelerating, Lewis doesn't, Vettel runs into the back of him
same situation - but Vettel is to the side of Lewis - Lewis doesn't accelerate, Vettel overshoots, gets in front, gets a penalty, but no collision - which one is more dangerous, side by side or one behind the other?
because the driver behind trying to catch the right moment when the lead is going to pull the trigger is inevitable in all possible cases - that is just pure racing, VSC even has this same element that Max exploited in this race, he somehow made up ~3sec deficit in one minisector, at least I suspect he did, I heard commentators saying Charles had somehow gained a lot of time on Max (~4sec gap), and then, as the VSC went away, Max was again at the 1,5sec distance, which meant that Max went significantly quicker right before the VSC ended if we assume that Charles was maintaining even pace all throughout - if that was the case, then the whole VSC purpose is out the window, I haven't heard anything about it yet, so I guess no rules were broken, but I think that was quite a questionable strategy there, the outcome was Max having a bit more heat in the tires than Charles and was able to close the remaining distance to get into the DRS window
and if you advocate for the "unfair" part, then SC periods have been an inherent part of race strategies, some underfuel expecting a SC period to save fuel and/or tires, some (like Lewis in this race) waited to see if there would be another SC period to allow him to change tires and lose less time than normal - you take all this away and you make racing much more of a procession, this is a technical sport, and you expect the unexpected and have a strategy to deal with it, sometimes it may favor you, sometimes the opposite, it has been IMO inherent part of the sport, and calling to get rid of it is just plain wrong in my opinion