santos wrote: ↑06 Jul 2017, 13:36
Every case different. You can't judge every crime in the same way. Imagine that this weekend, someone does the same as Vettel, but the other driver crash and have to abandon the race. Of course the punishment won't be the same.
That's an incredibly simplistic way to look at it. The incident was as it is because it was deemed to be 'deliberate'. If there was damage or not, is IMO secondary. One may be worse than the other, but the "intent" is what IMO is the biggest issue.
Joe Saward had an interesting take on it:
https://joesaward.wordpress.com/2017/07 ... n-penalty/
Joe Saward wrote:When all is said and done, the only conclusion one can reach is that this is an incredibly weak ruling – and a terrible precedent. If the reference about repetition applies to drivers other than Vettel (it is not clear from the wording), then it is clearly an unfair ruling. Why would Vettel be allowed to get away with something outrageous while other drivers are not allowed to? If the repetition reference applies only to Vettel, then any other driver who commits any such offence will be able to argue that there is a precedent for there to be no punishment – beyond some nebulous comunity service.
There may even be legal implications beyond the sport because punishing any future driver when Vettel was not punished in this case would not be fair and that brings into question whether this is good governance. In the Statement of Good Governance Principles, issued by the FIA in 2000, the federation commited itself to ensuring that procedures should be “fair, transparent, accessible and efficient”. In order to be fair to other drivers, the FIA cannot now punish them harshly – because of what it has done with Vettel. And if it does take action, it could open itself to civil action, and perhaps even claims that the federation has not properly upheld its role in the sport.
It would be only fair to ask what happens in the case it is repeated. The precedence is a 10-sec stop and go. Assuming the offender is in the points, it may be effective enough depending on the view point and if the sport deems this type of punishment to be adequate enough.
Assuming it is and it does happen again, would it be okay to punish the offender more than Vettel received?
There was a similar case in the aftermath of Rosberg setting a faster time under double waved yellows during QF last year under changing conditions by showing a momentary throttle-lift too that caused lots of discussion in the following post-race interview. I feel this is a more severe case, because it's about the ethic of what a driver should or should not do.