Jackuar wrote:Diesel wrote:Jackuar wrote:My 2 cents regarding the Vettel incident; please feel free to disagree.
Firstly, team orders are ridiculous.
Secondly, I might tend to accept them if there is a clear No.1, fighting for championship towards the end of the season. This is just the second race and both drivers deserve the chance to win the race. Who knows it might prove costly at the end of the season for Seb. What if he loses by 2 or 3 points in the end?
Thirdly, it would be good for the sport if there were no team orders and breaking the rules is one way of changing the rules. If everybody starts disobeying team order (Not for the sake of doing it but to show that everybody wants a shot at the glory), only then team managements would start thinking from a driver's point of view.
I'm not a Vettel fan; in fact, I dislike him. But today, I'm completely with him.
It wasn't so much about team orders for no overtaking. Both drivers were told to save tyres and adjust the engine mix to fuel save and driver to a lap delta. Vettel did not do that when told, and used everything at his disposal to overtake his team mate, who WAS driving to a lap delta, in fuel save mode, saving tyres. Once Vettel had gapped his team mate, he then drove the lap delta his engineer gave him. As Damon Hill put it after, he took the view "possession is nine tenths of the law", steal the win from his team mate and apologise later, it's still a win.
Didn't he prove in the end that pushing hard for a few laps hasn't really robbed him of the win at the end? Its not like he's disobeyed to take the tires to limit all the way.
If saving tyres and fuel was the real motto behind that order, I'd say Vettel is all the more right. Well, all you want me to do is save the tires and bring the car home; and I reply, well I can do that and plus get a win for me. Win-win situation... So, what's wrong?
Because Webber was in fuel save mode, a physical button on the steering wheel that slows the car down. It wasn't an even fight. It's like having a fast draw but I shot you before anyone says draw.
If you want to believe Vettel was in the right then you do so. But the facts are that both drivers were told to drive to a delta time and put the car in to a lean engine mix to save fuel. Webber did what he was instructed to do, but Vettel did not and used the opportunity to overtake his team mate.
There's nothing wrong with any of that by the way, apart from the fact he blatantly lied about doing it.
The other issue here is a lot of you are confusing an instruction from a race engineer with team orders. If you blur that line, where does it end?
ENGINEER: "Box this lap please"
DRIVER: "Er no. I don't follow team orders"
2 laps later the drivers slides off the race track on knackered tyres