chrisc90 wrote: ↑29 Aug 2022, 01:22
So on the 3 incidents that occurred on the track…. What would you have given?
Perez/leclerc
Alonso/ham
The Williams spinning out…
Others have already replied and they've mostly written the same but anyways ...
I answered the first one of the three in
this post, strictly speaking it was a breach of the regulations, at least borderline, which is probably why they didn't intervene, but even when really wanting to penalize Perez ... Leclerc wasn't ahead, so he couldn't have given up the position and a +5s it wouldn't have changed anything with the pace the RBs had, question is whether they're creating a precedent here (
edit: the thought being that at some point in a similar situation it could matter and a penalty could make a difference, and maybe, just maybe for the sake of consistency they could have slapped him with a meaningless +5)
No penalty for Hamilton is, as others pointed out, perfectly in line with how they handle first lap incidents, Hamilton was to blame, he took the blame, took himself out, Alonso carried on, it's done.
The first lap criterion aside, a +5s would be the usual penalty for such incidents if not on lap 1, i do have to admit that i have no clue how they convert in race or post race (time) penalties to grid penalties, imho it was not a severe enough rule breach to carry a grid drop for the next race.
You'd have to go many years back to find an example of a driver receiving a grid penalty with the other one not being eliminated from the race.
The last one is just a mistake by Latifi where the new gravel traps took out Bottas through no fault of his own, but you can hardly penalize the mistake, i assume the data did not show him doing anything stupid when spinning, like staying on throttle like Grosjean did in Barcelona some years ago.
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With regards to Hamilton's attempt to pass Alonso i'd like to add that Perez pulled a carbon copy of the move on Russell right behind HAM/ALO, he arguably left even less space on the inside, turned in more aggressively and wasn't alongside as early, the difference being that Russel - unlike Alonso - played along and nothing happened, as always it takes two to tango.
I'd fully expect a different approach from both of them in a different situation, potentially even against other drivers, but there really wasn't anything on the line for either of them as they are not in the WDC fight.