I think Hamilton was saving tires at first and went to attack Massa later, when opportunity arose. Then he was nursing a damaged car and eventually he did pass the Torro Rosso, didn't he? It had very high top speed didn't it? Alosno couldn't pass Petrov for a championship and you're here complaining about Hamilton having less trouble passing a fast top speed car for an already compromised race?vall wrote:I thought LH had a miserable race, no? First he was slower than the Ferraris and he could attack Massa only because he made a mistake. In the same time Button was flying, pulling away of Webber. Then he could not pass a Toro Rosso with DRS, then I expected him to easily catch the Mercs, but he could not.
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The racing line doesn't belong to the car in front if the other car comes half way along side you.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Ok, so was Hamilton along side?
I read that the stewards gave the penalty due to Hamilton being in Massa's peripheral vision. However, the racing line belonged to the car in front, and at no point did hamiltons front tyre go ahead of Massa's.
So if massa is on the racing line, and ahead of Hamilton, why should he yield? The BBC commentary team alluded to this too and where equally surprised as myself as to massa getting the penalty. I share their view that in this case, no blame should be apportioned to either driver.
When Hamilton was almost entirely ahead of Kobayashi and then went for the racing line you blamed Hamilton for the contact, even though Kobayashi was the one who turned in early.
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Hamilton didn't dive for it this time. He started breaking first. It's another story if you're behind and try to overtake in the breaking zone alone. Then the front driver has no time to react and it's usually your fault if you crash. This was no dive however.Gerhard Berger wrote:In these situations where someone tries to dive down the inside of someone (without being fully alongside the other driver) into a high speed corner, someone has to yield. With Alonso vs Webber at Spa this year, Alonso yielded. With Button vs Hamilton at China this year, Button yielded. With Alonso vs Massa at Hockenheim last year, Alonso yielded, etc. In this case neither did and unsurprisingly it resulted in a collision. That's racing, hence i thought it was harsh to give Massa the penalty.
Sure the collision could have been avoided, but you can say that about any collision in F1. They are racing for position, so collisions will sometimes happen when 2 drivers fight over the same piece of track. I think penalties should only be handed out for a clear breach of rules (so things like intentionally taking another driver out, intetionally forcing someone off the track).
100% Massa's fault. It was probably intentional too, but how are you going to prove that? ..............................................
.........................................JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Well If that's the precedent set, then anyone can stick there nose into a shrinking gap and hope for the best.
Because that's what will happen and more collisions will take place.
Hamilton didn't stick his nose in a shrinking gap. He was almost side by side on the straight and then started breaking first! FFS this was no dive at the breaking point. ......................................