Treating walls and track limits the same is ridiculous. By the same argument, track limits should also be policed inversely then, so that if any part of any wheel touches outside of the white line, you get your lap deleted.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑01 Jul 2024, 23:30The whole "squeezing another on to the kerbs" argument can be countered as it I'd about track limits: if there was a wall there, would you do it? Answer, obviously, is "no". So you shouldn't do it here either.
This acceptance of bully-boy tactics has, in my opinion, reduced the quality of wheel-to-wheel racing in many cases.
I would invite you to have a look at these laps from Villeneuve and Arnoux.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑01 Jul 2024, 23:30The whole "squeezing another on to the kerbs" argument can be countered as it I'd about track limits: if there was a wall there, would you do it? Answer, obviously, is "no". So you shouldn't do it here either.
This acceptance of bully-boy tactics has, in my opinion, reduced the quality of wheel-to-wheel racing in many cases.
This alone destroys every narrative about how reckless Verstappen was.AR3-GP wrote: ↑01 Jul 2024, 21:03The start. Norris squeezes Russell in the brake zone. Russell avoids a collision by going off track.
https://i.postimg.cc/50j7W95t/Norris-sq ... nboard.gif
I agree, it was a relatively innocuous and common thing with unexpectedly big consequences. Penalty is fair and consistent with how this has been treated in the past.Sevach wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:35I do get the feeling Max expected Lando to go over the curb in the braking zone, which isn't something he's obligated to do but is "normal" here.
"Putting the squeeze on" is a dangerous game that sometimes due to miscalculation, or the driver attacking not doing what you expect can lead to contact.
From the FIA guideline of judge the move not the consequences, 10s was correct, Max squeeze is what caused the collision and 10s was the norm for minor collisions, which this was.
Small touch with big consequences and for a important position.
I wonder if we'll see new directives on squeezes and dive bombs.
If VER followed the trajectory Norris did in above or Lec did in previously referenced video below it would be fine.Seanspeed wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:43This alone destroys every narrative about how reckless Verstappen was.AR3-GP wrote: ↑01 Jul 2024, 21:03The start. Norris squeezes Russell in the brake zone. Russell avoids a collision by going off track.
https://i.postimg.cc/50j7W95t/Norris-sq ... nboard.gif
If Russell had refused to move left, would that have made Norris some villain in the situation?
To me, divebombs should be treated the same way as weaving on the straigths, moving under braking or track limits should be treated: As a driving standards violation.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:56What they failed to address adequately was whether or not Norris gained a lasting advantage from his first off track lunge. With this lunge, he reduced the gap to Verstappen by shoving both off, used the DRS on the run to T4, and only then did he carefully let Verstappen back through in a manner such that the gap between them became smaller than it had ever been under normal circumstances (Was something like 0.050s after T4). This kept him even closer than before for DRS on the next lap.
I have never been a fan of "black and white" flag being shown to a driver due to a driving standard violation. Why? Because it means that every driver can violate driving standards once per race without a material penalty. When you only need "1 move" to decide a points paying position or a win, this "freedom" to secure that position with an illegitimate move doesn't seem right to me.TFSA wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 03:20To me, divebombs should be treated the same way as weaving on the straigths, moving under braking or track limits should be treated: As a driving standards violation.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:56What they failed to address adequately was whether or not Norris gained a lasting advantage from his first off track lunge. With this lunge, he reduced the gap to Verstappen by shoving both off, used the DRS on the run to T4, and only then did he carefully let Verstappen back through in a manner such that the gap between them became smaller than it had ever been under normal circumstances (Was something like 0.050s after T4). This kept him even closer than before for DRS on the next lap.
This means that a driver should get the black & white flag for a divebomb that pushes the other driver off the track, even if he gives the position back or fails to hold the lead - and 2nd strike it's a penalty.
In fact, this little rule change could solve many online discussions, and likely also disencourage drivers from doing that, while still maintaining the ability for them to race. A few drivers (including Verstappen and Norris) might probably also have to change their driving style a bit to account for that, and that's not a bad thing.
I agree with much of this.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:56I agree, it was a relatively innocuous and common thing with unexpectedly big consequences. Penalty is fair and consistent with how this has been treated in the past.Sevach wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:35I do get the feeling Max expected Lando to go over the curb in the braking zone, which isn't something he's obligated to do but is "normal" here.
"Putting the squeeze on" is a dangerous game that sometimes due to miscalculation, or the driver attacking not doing what you expect can lead to contact.
From the FIA guideline of judge the move not the consequences, 10s was correct, Max squeeze is what caused the collision and 10s was the norm for minor collisions, which this was.
Small touch with big consequences and for a important position.
I wonder if we'll see new directives on squeezes and dive bombs.
What they failed to address adequately was whether or not Norris gained a lasting advantage from his first off track lunge. With this lunge, he reduced the gap to Verstappen by shoving both off, used the DRS on the run to T4, and only then did he carefully let Verstappen back through in a manner such that the gap between them became smaller than it had ever been under normal circumstances (Was something like 0.050s after T4). This kept him even closer than before for DRS on the next lap.
This is similar to Verstappen cheekily trying to give Hamilton the position back just before the DRS line in Jeddah '21, so he could then re-overtake with DRS (stewards disallowed it) or Hamilton cheekily letting Raikkonen through in Spa that one year after the illegal bus stop pass. letting them back through" is not enough. You have to give up the "lasting advantage" that you gained. If Norris made that mistake on his own, he would have dropped out of DRS.
You have to remember that this is in addition to whatever penalty might be incurred if you don't give the position back. So the flag is given, even if the move fails, or you give the position back afterwards.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 03:31I have never been a fan of "black and white" flag being shown to a driver due to a driving standard violation. Why? Because it means that every driver can violate driving standards once per race without a material penalty. When you only need "1 move" to decide a points paying position or a win, this "freedom" to secure that position with an illegitimate move doesn't seem right to me.
No supporter of RBR can complain about stewards taking their time after the Jeddah SC restart where Perez was ahead of position and waited after the restart to give position back allowing Max to stay close to LEC while being defended by PER.Watto wrote:I agree with much of this.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:56I agree, it was a relatively innocuous and common thing with unexpectedly big consequences. Penalty is fair and consistent with how this has been treated in the past.Sevach wrote: ↑02 Jul 2024, 00:35I do get the feeling Max expected Lando to go over the curb in the braking zone, which isn't something he's obligated to do but is "normal" here.
"Putting the squeeze on" is a dangerous game that sometimes due to miscalculation, or the driver attacking not doing what you expect can lead to contact.
From the FIA guideline of judge the move not the consequences, 10s was correct, Max squeeze is what caused the collision and 10s was the norm for minor collisions, which this was.
Small touch with big consequences and for a important position.
I wonder if we'll see new directives on squeezes and dive bombs.
What they failed to address adequately was whether or not Norris gained a lasting advantage from his first off track lunge. With this lunge, he reduced the gap to Verstappen by shoving both off, used the DRS on the run to T4, and only then did he carefully let Verstappen back through in a manner such that the gap between them became smaller than it had ever been under normal circumstances (Was something like 0.050s after T4). This kept him even closer than before for DRS on the next lap.
This is similar to Verstappen cheekily trying to give Hamilton the position back just before the DRS line in Jeddah '21, so he could then re-overtake with DRS (stewards disallowed it) or Hamilton cheekily letting Raikkonen through in Spa that one year after the illegal bus stop pass. letting them back through" is not enough. You have to give up the "lasting advantage" that you gained. If Norris made that mistake on his own, he would have dropped out of DRS.
I think Max deserved his penalty for causing a collision was primary his fault.
But lando exceeding track limits and the stewarts taking to long to make call when I think it was clear also played into the fiasco. in quali they can almost instantly make the call for some reason in the race it takes 5-6 laps to make the same decision.
Understand there are some that are more grey that need longer investigations don't think that was one of the,
While I do think it was poor from Max here too. I really think the hes a dirty racer has been a bit unfair too. Hes super aggressive so is always going to push limits but think when he was challenged by Charles in 22 it was clean between them too - maybe because Max knew/thought Charles would get his elbows out so to speak and didn't think Lando would here but learnt a lesson.
I think both were at fault for elements of what happened, so I really don't think either side taking the highroad is that fair either.