Shrieker wrote:That should earn Kvyat a race ban, or at least a pitlane start.
I gotta speak up for Kvyatt ( and put on my flamesuit). In racing, if you stab your brakes, expect to get hit from behind.
Fact 1: Turn 1 (OK, Turn 2, really): Vettel stabbed his brakes. Why? Because he tried to dive underneath Massa . At race start, turn-one lock-ups and bumps are both regular and expected. Nothing new here.
Fact 2: Midway through turn 3: Vettel stabs his brakes again,
and jerks over over in-front of Kvyatt...right when he saw Perez's's back-end wiggle . A driver who unexpectedly slows and swerves in a section of track taken flat is inviting a crash and introducing risk to himself, and the pack behind him.
Fact 3: It has been established that the crash in China was not Danill's fault.
Maybe Vettel has a fair point with the first hit, but not the second. People calling for his scalp are being massively unfair.
I've always gotten the impression that Vettel is a little imperious. Reading Mark Webber's biography confirms as much: he sort of expects other drivers to make way for him--special treatment.
I further believe that if Danill was the one in front, and slowed suddenly in front of Seb, and that knocked him out, Vettel would have had the same reaction. "Kyvatt, the madman! WTF! He suddenly hits his breaks---in a flat section of track!"
Back to Webber, today we know that Vettel was in fact quicker (remember Turkey 2011) . Perhaps what we're seeing here is that Danill is the quicker one, like Seb was back then, and Seb is now the "Mark Webber."