Lol.
Rules are rules? I love the fact Bottas won, but if it was a jump start, it should be properly investigated, or else you will have drivers like Vettel who get every edge they can exploiting these very things next race. E.g.: slowly slipping the clutch just moments before the lights go out. Rules are rules for a reason and they should be consistent across the board, no matter who is in focus.
"At the driver's meeting in Bahrain, Sebastian Vettel had to listen to his fellow drivers complaints for 22 minutes. Lewis Hamilton, Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa where the ones who had the most critique on the Ferrari driver. They wanted to know from Charlie Whiting why the action was unpunished last sunday, and whether everyone would be able to put his car where they wanted, in the future."TAG wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:28Vettel parks his car waaaay ouside the grid box, the guy's a genius, always looking for an edge. Pushing the envelope. Come to think of it, I don't recall Hamilton radioing in a complaint about Vettel's starting position and having Charlie take a look at it.
Bottas gets a superhuman start... and it's hair on fire.
Rose colored glasses rules.
Isn't that what every F1 driver is supposed to do?Phil wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:40Rules are rules? I love the fact Bottas won, but if it was a jump start, it should be properly investigated, or else you will have drivers like Vettel who get every edge they can exploiting these very things next race. E.g.: slowly slipping the clutch just moments before the lights go out. Rules are rules for a reason and they should be consistent across the board, no matter who is in focus.
Its already getting embarrassing, they've given Ferrari 2 open goals in a row with the headrest and gearbox. Their only saving grace is that Sebs road rage cost him the win in Baku and that Austria was 71 laps instead of 72. They really need to turn up next week.Spoutnik wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:37I mean, if Hamilton, and Mercedes end up losing this championship it will be embarrassing. I think Mercedes have made big improvement, even if that's not clear because of all the problems in recent race, Ferrari are slightly behind in term of race pace now even on a track who was more suited to the qualities of the red cars. We've seen this since the Spanish GP I would say.
Furthermore, in qualifying it's quiet clear that Merc are better on a regular basis (that was not so obvious at the start of the season).
So, everything is in the hand of Hamilton, Bottas and Merc, if next week they bottle it again at home it would be a disgrace and Ferrari would be really lucky.
In the driver's meeting yes; As they should not over the radio. The FiA also issues a clarification. The point was about fanatically excusing your own while demanding the head of someone else. I'm glad you're not one of them. Like a lot of people here, all I look for is consistency. Bad enough we don't get it from the stewards, the it's rehashed on the forums.Treble wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:42"At the driver's meeting in Bahrain, Sebastian Vettel had to listen to his fellow drivers complaints for 22 minutes. Lewis Hamilton, Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa where the ones who had the most critique on the Ferrari driver. They wanted to know from Charlie Whiting why the action was unpunished last sunday, and whether everyone would be able to put his car where they wanted, in the future."
Absolutely, hence the necessity to investigate and punish where appropriate.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:52Isn't that what every F1 driver is supposed to do?Phil wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:40Rules are rules? I love the fact Bottas won, but if it was a jump start, it should be properly investigated, or else you will have drivers like Vettel who get every edge they can exploiting these very things next race. E.g.: slowly slipping the clutch just moments before the lights go out. Rules are rules for a reason and they should be consistent across the board, no matter who is in focus.
Are you factoring in his replaced transmission and subsequent grid penalty on the slide? It's a long season, don't worry he'll pull it out with plenty points to spare, especially now that Ferrari is beginning to falter on the development front, Vettel will feel the effects of grid penalties soon enough, he'll be sliding as well.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:59In my opinion, Austria was another exclamation mark to what I've believed in since 2016, which is Lewis is on the slide. His 'off' weekends are getting more and more frequent while he retains his usual untouchable brilliance on others.