Gerhard Berger wrote:to be fair to Vettel, a similar thing happened in Silverstone in 2011 with Webber ignoring the team order to hold position. In the end Webber didn't get past Vettel so no one really cared about it.
Being a Ferrari fan, i don't really like Vettel, but i thought this was probably his best win. He really had to work for it.
It wasn't similar. Where was keep 3 s gap for a start? Where was Webber's "get him out of the way" whining? Where was Vettel's obeying team orders in the end? Best win? Yes, it's always easy for certain drivers to be brave against your team-mate who is expected to behave in a certain way. You know: for the team's sake, a lot of space. He didn't look that good against Alonso, Button or Hamilton last season when he had to be at his best in those situations. It was a mess instead, lost wins and penalties.
It's funny to observe certain double standards, if one situation was OK second wasn't, some people like both funnily enough. My view: every case is different. Differences 1. Webb-Vett no big difference in pace caused by fuel saving. 2. Nothing to gain for the team from fight/switching positions. Rosberg could at least try to put some pressure on Red Bulls, Brawn could order Hamilton to move out of the way to avoid problems, if he wanted to, right?
And what's going on with this kindergarten stuff and being all apologetic and nice, while at the same DOING exactly the opposite? This approach that whatever you do is not important as long as you bullshit your way out of it with fake statements? It's mostly about Vettel but Mercedes situation, too. If Hamilton really felt that Rosberg deserved to be in front of him he had every opportunity to let him pass. He clearly did not do/think that while on the track.