You were the one who brought luck into it, and who was more lucky. The guy who got away with a podium after puncturing a tire just because 1/17 cars didnt go through a line in the track, or the guy who drove a great race and extended while maintaining the best pace on track on a circuit which has 100% safety car ratio.dia6olo wrote: ↑27 May 2024, 23:58The puncture is irrelevant, the correct rules were applied.Emag wrote: ↑27 May 2024, 22:43Getting a self-inflicted puncture in the first lap. Then the race gets red flagged and all but one car passes through the safety car line. A single car, which is enough for stewards to reset back to the initial order, is exactly the same magnitude of luck compared to managing your tires in the first stint to the best of your abilities, proceeding to set the pace on track for continuous laps, even compared to drivers which already had pit for fresh tires, and extending for a hope of a possible safety car on a track which has had a 100% safety car chance in the years we have raced.
Of course, these are exactly the same amount of lucky.
Not to mention the impeding incident in qualifying for which he did not get penalized, despite doing exactly the same thing a driver who got penalized just a week before did.
As for a penalty, let's not go there, it was a racing incident to pretty much everyone including the stewards, the only people that saw it different were McLaren people, what a shocker...
As for the impediment, it's funny you say only McLaren fans though it was a "racing incident", which for your information, is not the correct thing to say, because by definition, there is no racing on a qualifying.
But terminology aside, everyone who saw it happening thought Sainz was gonna get a grid drop for it. Then people were surprised to see the steward's ruling.
It's baffling how you can view that from such a biased perspective. It was literally impeding which was not punished simply because Albon got through to Q3.
If Albon was out in Q1 because of it, we would have a different story.