PlatinumZealot wrote:bhall II wrote:PlatinumZealot wrote:It was not a racing incident. It was a malicious attack to punt his title rival off the road.
Again...
bhall II wrote:
"When you are on the outside you have to expect that. It's tough for sure, but this is not a friendly game of chess..."
~
Lewis Hamilton, Suzuka 2015
The point here is not to absolve anyone of anything, only to say that what happened wasn't so far out of line that it should be considered unreasonable.
Sometimes --- happens.
Bhall, Bhall.. I still cannot agree with you that Suzuka 2015 is similar. Hamilton is darned right, yes. He should be proud of that wonderfully executed defense of his race line.
This is nothing like what happened today. Not in the very least. Hamilton had the line and was ahead. He left sace.. aaaannd.. he didn't hit Nico.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_oJ-xXkGzv8
Not quite. Rosberg leads off the start.
Still ahead.
Hamilton already wide of optimal line, begins to push Rosberg wider.
Hamilton now way off line, compared with Vettel and Bottas (onboard), leaving Rosberg no option but to go off the race track, in an area with no run-off.
And the result - Rosberg pushed off the track.
To summarise:
Hamilton was not "way ahead".
Hamilton did have the inside line.
Hamilton did not "leave space" for the car alongside his.
Contact was inevitable, and only Rosberg driving off the track prevented it.
Let's compare with yesterday:
Rosberg was not "way ahead".
Rosberg did have the inside line.
Rosberg did not "leave space" for the car alongside his.
Contact was inevitable, and only Hamilton driving off the track would have prevented it.
I am in no way claiming Rosberg is innocent, but how you can constantly legitimise Hamilton's moves without acknowledging its contribution to future conflict is beyond me.
Hamilton has made the same assumption twice this year - assuming Rosberg will be compliant - and been wrong on both occasions.