bhallg2k wrote:I'm reminded of Monza in 2009 when Hamilton crashed out - on a dry track - on the penultimate lap of the race while running in 3rd behind the Brawns of Barrichello and Button. That outcome proved that restraint is sometimes the most aggressive tactic. Points are points are points. (And so is a podium.)
Sauber and Perez made a wise choice. The only catcalls come from the peanut gallery from people who've never raced anything.
Nothing can be taken for granted.
Other than the *jibe* about catcalls (first known use ca. 1693) and peanut galleries (vaudeville-era in origin), yessssssss, points are indeed points. Sauber made a call that was clearly theirs to make. Sure, discretion being the better part of valor. But how much of an advantage does one need before "a real racer" would change his mind? At what point do you stop minimizing risk? Otherwise you're arguing that Vettel should never have pushed past 2nd in 2011.
The whole reason the 2010 point system was changed was because of this exact situation. I remember actually taking the opposite perspective before then. Sure, discretion might be the right choice later this season between the top 3 drivers. But its definitely NOT clear cut here. Not with a 0.5-1.0s per lap advantage, better tires with more laps behind them, better aero, a winless team, DRS on a 1KM straight, and 10+ laps to go.
My point is, discretion is fine, but it is not absolute.