TFSA wrote: ↑05 Oct 2023, 20:19
chrisc90 wrote:I never claimed they were ‘entitled’ to anything.
I said they could possibly benefit from a penalty that should have been equally applied where it wasn’t because it involved 2 drivers from the same team
chrisc90 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2023, 10:24
Maybe o was a little premature with the Japan specific comment after people evaluated the situation but I don’t see why a racing/driving offence should be dealt with any more lenient than another team.
As I said, the consequences of a lack of penalty can affect other teams.
If there is a drive by standards issues, it should be dealt with equally, irrespective of those involved.
If you can highlight where I said the car behind/ahead etc is specifically ’entitled to benefit’ it would be appreciated.
When you're arguing that two drivers tussling ahead, who happens to be from the same team, shouldn't escape penalty because drivers further back could potentially benefit from it despite them not being involved in the altercation, you're making the idea that the driver behind is somehow entitled to benefit an implicit part of your argument for why intra-team altercations should be punished.
So it's implicit in the argument you're making, whether you realized it or not.
hairy_scotsman wrote:And it shouldn't matter anyway if they're teammates. The rules don't just apply to the teams. They apply to the the drivers just as much. Individual drivers should be protected by the rules even if their teammate is the one causing the problem.
Most sports don't work that way. I refer to my football comparison from the earlier. Things that happens between teammates aren't dealt with the same way as if they happen between competitors. That's how most sports work.
I'm really not though. You need to go back and re-read exactly what I have put and i'm trying to say, but it seems you want to believe I want a driver behind to benefit. (yet you still didnt answer my point about someone 'entitled to benefit' - I guess I never said that.
Lets try break it down - not that I can explain it any simpler than I already have.
Lets say 10 laps from the end, purely for reasonings sake, it would be the same anyhow at whatever point in the race.
Team A drivers fighting for 3rd position, the last step on the podium.
Car A from Team A sends it down the inside and manages to make the move stick by both cars going through the corner level. Car A on the inside, and car B on the outside.
Car A then runs that car out wide, pushing Car B off the track and onto the grass.
At this point, you have a car forcing another off the track, so as what we normally see, thats a 10second penalty. (Lets not argue about fine specifics that Car B is entitled to XYZ, Just the pure fact that Car A forced Car B off the track)
Both Car A and Car B are from the same team A.
Behind is Team B at 6 seconds, and it drops down to 5 seconds after Car B from Team A rejoined the track. At this point your gaps are.
Team A - Car A. 0:000 (lets presume the gap to 2nd place is totally irrelevant)
Team A - Car B + 3seconds
Team B - Car A/b +5seconds.
Stewards note the incident and investigate, however find that because it only involved 2 team A cars, there is no reason to issue a 10 second penalty - as they would do if the scenario was played out between Team A and Team B battling for 3rd spot.
So race ends and the gaps remain the same, since no penalties were retrospectively applied to the race time/gaps at the end of the race. Now Team B has 'lost out' because the penalty wasnt properly applied because it simply involved 2 team mates battling on track.
So the real result should have been
Team A, Car B 0.000
Team B, Car A/B +5seconds
Team A, Car A + 10seconds
So the 'other team' would have benefitted from the stewards rightfully awarding a 10second penalty during a battle between team mates.
I completely fail to see how you can suggest that driver behind a team battle should not have the benefit of a penalty being properly applied during a battle of team mates.
Its just simple. Its how penalties have always worked, if your penalty drops you a spot or 2 behind another team then so be it. (no different to the driver behind benefitting from a penalty).
The key here is that team battles SHOULD be penalised, IF the driving standards drop below that of what is expected.
You cant issue a penalty for something that involves 2 teams for a incident, but if the car colours were changed in a identical replay of that incident, then there should be no penalty - because fans dont want to see it and teams would issue orders. Ludicrous.
Mess with the Bull - you get the horns.