It's not non-sense at all.basti313 wrote: ↑06 May 2024, 08:44Sorry, but I do not know why this nonsense about a safety car is going in circles with complete nonsense arguments. The facts:
1. If they think they need a SC they have to deploy it for safety. There is no "wait with VSC", otherwise they can just keep the VSC. In contrast, with the shifted TecPro it was rather a question if they even need to put a red flag out.
2. Once they deploy the SC, it goes out. In case they are in the middle of the pack and the situation allows it, they can wait at the SC line. They tried to catch the leader, but Norris was already on the pit straight, so they simply could not. Some years ago we saw a very similar example in Monza where a Mercedes even passed the SC because they could before the SC line. This was just a rare issue, where the leader was already on the pit straight and it is completely ok to not catch the leader in this case.
3. I do not know why people at McLaren and RedBull had the idea of Norris being maybe a lap ahead. It would have always been the rule to let the pack pass and have Norris behind the SC for the restart.
3. It changed NOTHING. Norris had a gap of roughly 11 seconds before the SC was deployed. A pitstop under SC costs 8 seconds. So even a bad stop would have been covered.
Not all situations require you to deploy a safety car instantly. In this particular case, we had two cars who had crashes OFF the track (in the run-off), where one of them got going again. While that might require a safety car to bunch up the pack in order to clean up properly, it does not require the immeditate deployment of the actual safety car under those track conditions. The VSC has the advantage that it can be cancelled almost immediately, where the full SC procedure requires several laps to cancel. It's definitely my assessment that they were too quick to deploy the full SC here, and the fact that the SC didn't catch Norris - even if it didn't change the outcome of the race - is clearly a mistake.
The "lap ahead" idea is of course ridiculous, we agree on that, although i will note that we have seen that happen under Red Flag conditions - in this case at the 2023 Brazilian GP, where Tsunoda and Piastri started a lap down after the Red Flag, in a situation where they clearly should have been allowed to "unlap" themselves before the race restart.
As for your final point: That it didn't change anything in this race doesn't mean it won't in another race. And your argument about "Even a bad stop" doesn't make sense to me, because you seem to assume that a bad stop just means a 4-5 second pit stop. But that's not a fact - it could easily be 10-12, like we saw happen to both Verstappen and Vettel at Austin 2022. Or, in extreme cases, Stake F1 bad.