@timbo
He should be quicker, the point is he was carry too little speed.
The guy on the outside should not be faster in this case.
Remeber this is a sweeper not a hairpin. Your logic makes sense in a hair pin where low speed traction would favour the guy on the outside.
In this case, Hamilton should not be quicker than Massa from where he is on the track.
Hamilton enters at a slower speed, scrubs of more speed by rotating the car across to Massa. Massa having less wheel lock input, and a clear and wide exit leading to the curbs, should have no trouble navigating this corner at decent speed and grip.
Massa was so slow we could actually see a him make a correction to realign himself after he took the touch from Hamilton. Now that's too slow an exit speed.
Massa's line was not tighter. Raymundo, sometime we have to assess the situation than cut and paste rules of thumb about racing lines that generally fit the bill in some cases.
In this case, Massa was well positioned to accelerate harder out of that turn.
Look how he twitched to the right to align himself after the touch. He wasn't going as quick as the grip of the car could allow him.
Remeber this is not a hair pin. Massa was not defending the entry. He was defending the exit. which is what you do in a turn like this. You screen the exit.
His defense was not wrong, it simply was too slow for his own good. Hence the collision.
He could have exited quicker. And actually have a better chance of keeping the position.
The grip was available judging by his very straight exit.
Now the instruction to destroy Hamilton's race. Well i'll have to take that at face value. I don't know Smeddley or Massa personally to try to find an interpretation that is less severe. But destroying another driver's race is not actually legal, if one reads the regulations.
Controlling the race is different than destroying it.