That has become more or less the only thing they have in common anymore: they will not give one tiny bit of sh*t of what the team thinks. For the rest: yes, it would be foolish to intentionally ram your team"mate". I think both you and me can recall teammates did so more then enough in the past. To quote ayrton senna "I will go for it and he better not turn in because he’s not going to make it."Juzh wrote:Yeah, he pushed him almost into the wall, which was wrong, but crucially they didn't crash and that is all that matters. Even if they meet on the track again this year, chances of them crashing this early in the season when everything is still open are pretty slim imo. Intentional ramming your teammate (or any driver) of the track would be on a different level of retardedness and would not have been taken lightly by the team or the FIA.
Right, because Vettel was trying to pass when he was told not to. I expect to see some crashing between the two.turbof1 wrote:You did see what happened at malaysia right? Webber forced vettel very close to the wall. Put them in the exact same situation this weekend and I guarantee you that Vettel will have to scrape his car off the wall.
I'm sure he likes lollipops and bunnies too, but words mean nothing and he doesn't run the team.CHT wrote: Mateschitz is opposed to team orders on principle and wants to see the drivers race, as befits Red Bull's sporting philosophy.
Well, it's sorta easy to say that you're against team orders after your drivers have told you that they won't follow them. It's a heck of a lot easier than telling the world that you've no control over your team, that's for sure.CHT wrote:The man has spoken.. =D>
Mateschitz is opposed to team orders on principle and wants to see the drivers race, as befits Red Bull's sporting philosophy.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/22109935
Your expectations will come out empty, you'll see.dren wrote:Right, because Vettel was trying to pass when he was told not to. I expect to see some crashing between the two.turbof1 wrote:You did see what happened at malaysia right? Webber forced vettel very close to the wall. Put them in the exact same situation this weekend and I guarantee you that Vettel will have to scrape his car off the wall.
rkn wrote:Huge statements from Vettel.
Even though i feel Webber was clearly robbed of a victory and that Vettel's actions were immature and disgusting, i actually respect Vettel more after reading that interview. First of all he is right in that he is a racer not only as a person but as professional. Second of all, we all know that the apologies he made to Mark were false and pure media bullsh**. The fact that he is defending his actions, and publicly saying he would have done it again is proof that he thinks he did the right thing. IMO you always should do what you think is right, especially if that is something you know you would do again. But he also displays a clear double standard when he says that he is still sorry for putting himself above the team: If he makes the same move again in the future (which he says he would), that'll also be putting himself in front of the team, so is he then really sorry?
Without a doubt Vettel feels obnoxiously entitled to win, at any cost. My point is that if he is going to behave like this, he might as well own up, and stand for it like he did today, not like he did immediately after the Malaysian GP.
I'm surprised that it took Seb so long to retaliate on Mark's lack of team order discipline. Webber did it 2010 in Turkey and created the opportunity for the crash, he went on with it at Silverstone 2011 and crowned it with his attack in Brazil 2012. So he effectively did it for each of the last three years. Why would Seb feel that he had to stick to team orders when his team mate always disregards them?ringo wrote:Overall i think vettel is not speaking the truth as it is.
He shouldnt say Mark didnt deserve the win. I a would agree with him if Mark had full power and was told to keep going.
However Mark was told to slow down and turn down his engine....