f1316 wrote:I think on balance it was fair to give Kimi the penalty (but also agree that Dani Ric should have got one in Monaco).
But I think you could also argue that if you subscribe to the Senna axiom - "if you no longer go for a gap that exists, you are no longer a racing driver" - then this move embodies that. There was definitely a gap and you want to see drivers take this kind of risk; it's still fair to get a punishment if they don't come off - that's what makes it a risk.
I completely disagree that there was a gap. At the point at which he was "along side" (F1 definition, front wing next to rear wheel), there already was not a car's width between Bottas' front wheel and the apex. That by definition is "not a gap" (at least not one large enough to put a racing car through).
This for me is the difference between a "dive bomb" and a legitimate overtake. It's nothing to do with how far back you came from, it's about where the overtakee is positioned at the time you got along side. If you get along side down the straight - clearly that's okay. If you get along side in the breaking zone - also okay. If you get along side as they turn in - risky, but okay. If you get along side as they're approaching the apex - that's not okay.
That said, these drivers are making split second decisions. I'm sure that to Kimi it looked like he was in the "risky but okay" category when he decided to try the move. Unfortunately, it turned out to be false, and yeh, the result is, a completely valid penalty, and two upset Finns.