Sainz got the penalty because while making the overtake he lost control of the rear and oversteered into piastri. That’s the difference.Seanspeed wrote: ↑26 May 2024, 00:49It's actually worse, cuz Sainz not only had to deal with Piastri running him off when Sainz had a dead to rights overtaking chance(that he likely would have pulled off), but then got penalized later for some admittedly hard overtaking while being angry about even having to battle for a position he'd basically already won.Emag wrote: ↑25 May 2024, 23:07The Miami incident is a completely different case and stewards have shown that they are more inclined to give right to the car which takes the inside line (within reasonable bounds). And it's not like in the McLaren-Ferrari battle they won anything with that since Carlos barged his way through and Oscar got 0 points in Miami.
I hate all this 'oh but that was different' arguing when it's convenient. It's literally illegal to push others off-track. Point is, stewards should have punished him for that, but didn't. So please dont go pretending y'all are some victims here, especially in an incident you literally weren't even involved in.
Argue that weren't fortunate here or something, but you're not 'victims'.
Concerning Piastri running Sainz off the road, while I may not like the overtaking rules as they are and they have been applied inconsistently from time to time, this isn’t one of those times. The way the current overtaking rules are set up allowed Piastri to run Sainz off the road. Like I said, I don’t like it as it is but Piastri used the rules to his advantage the same way any driver would.
This current trend of drivers running each other off the corner became solidly established in 2021 with Hamilton and Verstappen and has been consistent since.