WhiteBlue wrote:I don't think anybody tried to insult your intelligence, segedunum and certainly not the board's intelligence. One can easily have split opinions about Rubens Barichello's pass on Schumacher and be completely sane of mind. I see that your offending remark is now removed and that tells a lot about who is discussing things and who is misbehaving or trolling.
To suggest that Rubens is doing anything dangerous here, despite what Michael may or may not have done (and there isn't much debate about that), is totally nuts. Rubens pulled out and overtook. What you're suggesting is that no matter what Rubens did he had no right to overtake and was being dangerous. Utter crap.
Frankly I don't care whose comments are being removed and no it doesn't prove any of your points.
show that such reports about Schumacher changing his lines are in error. As the next picture clearly shows
He makes two clear moves where he straightens after them, it's totally clear he's reacting to what Rubens is doing by looking in his mirror and Rubens has to change his direction consistently to avoid a large collision. Once Rubens moves he is committed because he's boxed in and Schumacher still moves over. The picture shows what you want it to see.
Barichello drives his car on a straight into a gap that points directly into the wall.
You've take one frame in one picture where Rubens has to change direction and you take that that he is making one move towards the wall and a move potentially towards his own death. That is so stupid it isn't even funny.
I'm not alone in the opinion that a racing driver in the seventies would have never done such a thing.
It wouldn't have happened because a driver in the seventies wouldn't have moved over like that EVER. His mind would immediately have turned to regaining the position at the next corner. James Hunt defended his line but he made sure he did it as early as possible - and he stayed there.
I love how people are commenting on this in a way they think is definitive when it's clear you and others have never been anywhere near the cockpit of any racing vehicle, and it's damn lucky you never have.
Speaking of opinions, you're not going to find a driver who has commented on this who doesn't think this is Schumacher's fault from Wurz to Coulthard to Button, so if you're using opinions to back up what you are trying to say then I'm afraid you lose on that score, so there.
It would have been potentially suicidal in one of the old cars to rely on someone else for space.
They did it all the time you twit because they all knew of the consequences. A driver in front knew when to yield his position when he knew he was slower and knew he had to position his car right to try and get it back. Running people into walls to get them to stay behind was never an option.
And that is someone who is clearly ahead and may not have seen you or isn't expecting to have to give up his line on a straight piece of tarmac to make place. Place for you which you have not had in the first place, that is.
Rubens was alongside and Michael waited until he moved. You can't just place a car continually in the face of another driver.
What follows next is a provoked dangerous move by Schumacher that earned him a penalty which I support and have supported before.
Oh, deary me. Once again, to suggest that Rubens caused this is, well, you know. Even when you've tried to say that Schumacher deserved the penalty you're trying to say it was initiated by another driver - because he was racing in a faster car and was overtaking - perhaps in an attempt to make it look as if this wasn't really all Schumacher's fault. Frankly I'm not sure what you're trying to say.