organic wrote: ↑24 Jul 2023, 12:20
For me the worst instances were in 2021. Gasly dived out of Max's way at Qatar costing him 0 seconds, whilst Tsunoda did absolutely everything he could to keep Hamilton behind him at Turkey costing him at least 5s - probably much more.
It's a situation that creates lots of issues in a title fight when AT have a competitive car. At the minute, it's not a problem bc AT are so slow and nobody challenges RB, but the closer AT is to RB in performance the more often these situations will arise
Marko controls the fate of the two AT drivers and if they hurt Max / help Marko's rivals then he will probably be unhappy with them and their career prospects could be directly hurt - RB juniors are at the mercy of Marko mostly.
Even if in this instance Yuki had no awareness that Lando was fighting RB for the race lead, I have the distinct feeling he wouldn't have ignored so many blue flags if it was Max in his mirrors.
It will remain a problem for the sport for as long as there is a joint driver program between AT and RB. This is the greater problem compared to the shared ownership
This isn't really a team problem. It's a junior academy driver problem. Tsunoda was told of the blue flags. He has a mind of his own which may be to serve his own interest.
As a reminder:
Monaco 2018: Ocon famously jumped out of the way for Hamilton in Monaco, of all places. It was discussed that Ocon said their was unwritten rule about it because he is Mercedes driver, and Toto said "that's the way it is".
https://www.autoweek.com/racing/formula ... ce-fixing/
Singapore 2019, Giovinazzi (Ferrari junion) dived out of the way of the Ferraris after the 1st round of pitstops, and made it difficult to everyone else.
Turkey 2021, Tsunoda practically said he wanted Honda to win in his final year, in addition to RB.
It doesn't really matter if their is shared team ownership. It's the driver's own motivations to be promoted to the senior team which can cause this. It's not a RB specific issue.
Even if you banned junior driver academies, a junior driver will attempt to curry favor with the big team that he wants to drive for in the future. If Leclerc was an "unbranded" driver and knew he wanted to drive for Ferrari and was in negotiations to replace Raikkonen, will he ignore blue flags when a Ferrari is behind him?
All of the drivers have their own self-interest. All the FIA can do is employ more aggressive policing of blue flag violations. You can't remove a junior driver's motivations to "impress" the big team that he wants to drive for. It may not be sporting in the big picture for a junior driver to behave like this, but juniors often feel the ends justify the means if they are rewarded with a contract at the big team.
A lion must kill its prey.