They probably have to turn up as a witness. Remember, Pirelli has no connection what so ever with the rules, technical or sporting, and is bound by a private contract. The Tribunal has no juristiction concerning Pirelli.Dragonfly wrote:I hear now Pirelli are also charged and will appear in front of the IT on June 20.
You can read it in the original FiA statement.Dragonfly wrote:I hear now Pirelli are also charged and will appear in front of the IT on June 20.
The way I read it Pirelli and Mercedes are both required to appear to a hearing of the IT. The difference is the possible consequence in the applicability of any action that the IT will suggest.FiA wrote:Hearing of the International Tribunal: Disciplinary procedure against Mercedes and Pirelli (2013 FIA Formula One World Championship)
Mon 10.06.13, 5:05PM
The following hearing of the International Tribunal will take place in Paris:
Hearing
Disciplinary procedure against Mercedes and Pirelli (2013 FIA Formula One World Championship)
On 5 June 2013, further to protests lodged during the 2013 Monaco GP by Red Bull Racing and Ferrari Scuderia Team against cars n°9 and 10 (Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team) for having conducted with Pirelli a three day tyre testing using a 2013 car on 15, 16 and 17 May in Barcelona, the President of the FIA, acting as the FIA Prosecuting Body, sent to the President of the International Tribunal a notification of charges against Pirelli and a notification of charges against Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team.
On 5 June 2013, Pirelli and Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team have been convened by the President of the International Tribunal to appear before a judging panel of the International Tribunal.
When
09.30 hrs
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Where
FIA Salle du Comité,
8, place de la Concorde,
75008 Paris
Decision
The decision of the International Tribunal will be published as soon as possible after the hearing.
I would not say that the rules are opposed, but they leave a grey area because they expose the tyre supplier to the bickering of the teams that will never agree on a testing procedure that fits the needs of the supplier. So Pirelli took it in their hands to to escape from this situation by a bold interpretation of the rules. They convinced Mercedes to try the loop hole argument I have to assume. Or even Mercedes proposed it to them to gain additional testing opportunity from the grey area.strad wrote:It would appear from everything I have read, that the sport is governed by one rule on testing and the type of car used, and a contract with the supplier that expected and demands a different even diametrically opposed rule.
And that is the FIAs problem and something they need top address..Not the teams or Pirelli
More like MrE coersed Pirelli to it, in order for Mercedes to gain five races worth of mid-season testing time.WhiteBlue wrote: ...
Or even Mercedes proposed it to them to gain additional testing opportunity from the grey area.
...
It looks more like three race distances to me, but generally you seem to have hit the nail on the head.xpensive wrote:More like MrE coersed Pirelli to it, in order for Mercedes to gain five races worth of mid-season testing time.WhiteBlue wrote: ...
Or even Mercedes proposed it to them to gain additional testing opportunity from the grey area.
...
Or so I think.
There is only one rule, the one in the sporting regs. I don't see how Merc could argue that the contract between the FIA and Pirelli could alleviate the need for Merc to follow the sporting regs. Pirelli's contract is just that: A contract with an outside supplier. That has nothing to do with the requirement for teams to follow the regs.WhiteBlue wrote:You can read it in the original FiA statement.Dragonfly wrote:I hear now Pirelli are also charged and will appear in front of the IT on June 20.
http://www.fia.com/news/international-tribunal
The way I read it Pirelli and Mercedes are both required to appear to a hearing of the IT. The difference is the possible consequence in the applicability of any action that the IT will suggest.FiA wrote:Hearing of the International Tribunal: Disciplinary procedure against Mercedes and Pirelli (2013 FIA Formula One World Championship)
Mon 10.06.13, 5:05PM
The following hearing of the International Tribunal will take place in Paris:
Hearing
Disciplinary procedure against Mercedes and Pirelli (2013 FIA Formula One World Championship)
On 5 June 2013, further to protests lodged during the 2013 Monaco GP by Red Bull Racing and Ferrari Scuderia Team against cars n°9 and 10 (Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team) for having conducted with Pirelli a three day tyre testing using a 2013 car on 15, 16 and 17 May in Barcelona, the President of the FIA, acting as the FIA Prosecuting Body, sent to the President of the International Tribunal a notification of charges against Pirelli and a notification of charges against Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team.
On 5 June 2013, Pirelli and Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team have been convened by the President of the International Tribunal to appear before a judging panel of the International Tribunal.
When
09.30 hrs
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Where
FIA Salle du Comité,
8, place de la Concorde,
75008 Paris
Decision
The decision of the International Tribunal will be published as soon as possible after the hearing.
Mercedes will be immediately concerned with the judgement. If they disagree with the judgement they will have to take it to the international court of appeal (also an FiA institution).
Pirelli would have to expect a letter from the president of the FiA telling them that they are in breach of contract and what the FiA are intending to do about it. If they disagree they would have to follow up in a French court. But those are only differences in procedure. Both Merc and Pirelli do not want a negative verdict.
I would not say that the rules are opposed, but they leave a grey area because they expose the tyre supplier to the bickering of the teams that will never agree on a testing procedure that fits the needs of the supplier. So Pirelli took it in their hands to to escape from this situation by a bold interpretation of the rules. They convinced Mercedes to try the loop hole argument I have to assume. Or even Mercedes proposed it to them to gain additional testing opportunity from the grey area.strad wrote:It would appear from everything I have read, that the sport is governed by one rule on testing and the type of car used, and a contract with the supplier that expected and demands a different even diametrically opposed rule.
And that is the FIAs problem and something they need top address..Not the teams or Pirelli
I think if the IT sees it in the same way they will tell the FiA to clarify the rules with regard to this particular problem. At least I think that would be a good outcome from the hearing. All three parties could accept that without loss of face.
For now that is still an opinion. Public communication from the FIA showed it really is not that black and white, and Mercedes claims to have proof that, in their communications with the FIA, they got allowed to use the 2013 car. Because this got reïterated quite alot by them and Pirelli, it looks like they are really convinced about that one.GTSpeedster wrote:It couldn't be simpler. How some people insist on defending Merc and Pirelli is beyond impressive as the rule was obviously and unquestionably broken.
Well, because Pirelli is an outside supplier and because it has nothing to do with teams obliged to follow the rules, the sporting might not apply here. The FIA did half-hearted admitted that the use of the 2013 car and the current drivers, was allowed under certain conditions (of which the FIA claims they weren't all met), for Pirelli to test. If -and I say IF- the verdict is that Pirelli tested and not Mercedes, the sporting rules are not in effect.Pierce89 wrote: There is only one rule, the one in the sporting regs. I don't see how Merc could argue that the contract between the FIA and Pirelli could alleviate the need for Merc to follow the sporting regs. Pirelli's contract is just that: A contract with an outside supplier. That has nothing to do with the requirement for teams to follow the regs.
You need to read the thread to understand why the regulations probably have not been broken at all. The regulations prohibit competitors to run in season tests. Mercedes will argue that they did not run the test and that Pirelli was the party that ran the test using Merc's cars and drivers. So it is not a question of the Pirelli contract alleviating the requirement for teams to follow the regs. The simple question for the tribunal to discover is who ran the test. Was the team sufficiently fire walled from the running of the test to claim no significant involvement. I find it entirely possible that the tribunal will find that. The only team members closely involved in the test so far seem to be the drivers and they have no team responsibility under their FiA license. If some other team members with FiA license such as the directors or race engineers were involved that would be a much bigger problem. In that case Mercedes would be guilty as hell.Pierce89 wrote:There is only one rule, the one in the sporting regs. I don't see how Merc could argue that the contract between the FIA and Pirelli could alleviate the need for Merc to follow the sporting regs. Pirelli's contract is just that: A contract with an outside supplier. That has nothing to do with the requirement for teams to follow the regs.
You are obviously wrong! Read the thread!GTSpeedster wrote:It couldn't be simpler. How some people insist on defending Merc and Pirelli is beyond impressive as the rule was obviously and unquestionably broken.
Correct, but it is sad that Mercedes is to such a value for MrE that he takes a page out of Vince McMahon's book.WhiteBlue wrote:It looks more like three race distances to me, but generally you seem to have hit the nail on the head.xpensive wrote:More like MrE coersed Pirelli to it, in order for Mercedes to gain five races worth of mid-season testing time.WhiteBlue wrote: ...
Or even Mercedes proposed it to them to gain additional testing opportunity from the grey area.
...
Or so I think.
There are a number of things that are known.FoxHound wrote:As has been said before, this has all the hallmarks of power play.
The big question is to what ends are the powerplayers playing?
Who, what and why are the targets of this power brokerage.
Damn WB...I think we are in agreement for a change.I think if the IT sees it in the same way they will tell the FiA to clarify the rules with regard to this particular problem. At least I think that would be a good outcome from the hearing. All three parties could accept that without loss of face.