There's a difference between your interpretation "back to his racing line" and the wording of the rules "towards the racing line,".George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:22The whole back straight Max drove on the left.. so that was his racing line, he moves a bit to the middle and moves back to his racing line, which was the left side at the time.
How hard can it be?
Not much of an argument. You can clearly see his movements. Starts left. Goes right. Goes left. There are a couple of white lines he helpfully zig-zags across.George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:52It was Verstappen’s racing line- otherwise we can argue all night long that Verstappen never even moved from or towards the normal racing line/ right side of the track.
is this some sort of a joke?George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:41There was even space left between Max and the wall, but Ricciardo didn’t not go there to avoid a crash- he couldn’t anymore- because he misjudged the situation.
The racing line is not a fixed thing; it is the line you’re racing at the moment of time from where onwards you could make ‘moves’.. because you are always allowed to move back to side from where you initiated the move (incase there is room)Wynters wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:54There's a difference between your interpretation "back to his racing line" and the wording of the rules "towards the racing line,".George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:22The whole back straight Max drove on the left.. so that was his racing line, he moves a bit to the middle and moves back to his racing line, which was the left side at the time.
How hard can it be?
Not much of an argument. You can clearly see his movements. Starts left. Goes right. Goes left.George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:52It was Verstappen’s racing line- otherwise we can argue all night long that Verstappen never even moved from or towards the normal racing line/ right side of the track.
And that is perfectly ‘legal’.. because that 2nd move is the move back towards the position on the track before you initiated the whole ‘move’ in the first place.
Actually, the racing line most commonly referred to the quickest way around the track, which will be pretty equal for 90% of the time for all cars.George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:01The racing line is not a fixed thing; it is the line you’re racing at the moment of time from where onwards you could make ‘moves’.. because you are always allowed to move back to side from where you initiated the move (incase there is room).
What part of one move only don't you understand?George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:22Wow?!! The video is just there?!!
Please show me where I see things as I want them to see..
The whole back straight Max drove on the left.. so that was his racing line, he moves a bit to the middle and moves back to his racing line, which was the left side at the time.
How hard can it be?
Verstappen has already used up his lifetime share of that quote.George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:45It wasn’t just ‘a quote’ it was his whole mindset and driverlife-philosophy..
How do you know what the "moment in time" is when "you could make 'moves'"? What are these 'moves' you refer to? Where are these defined of mentioned in the regulations?George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:01The racing line is not a fixed thing; it is the line you’re racing at the moment of time from where onwards you could make ‘moves’.. because you are always allowed to move back to side from where you initiated the move (incase there is room)
That's exactly what 'The racing line' is. That's why its referred to as 'The racing line' in the regulations. It's not 'the driver's racing line' or 'a racing line' or 'Verstappen's personal racing line that lets him do stupid things'... it's The racing line'.George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:01Of course you have a ‘normal racing line’ which is the most optimum to go as fast as possible around a specific track.
We have FIA and Cristian Horner mocking our intelligence with their statements .George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 16:41Most sensible drivers bla bla..
Kimi passed Vettel in Baku in the end.
People seem to forget you first race against your teammate and than the rest;
when Rosberg and Hamilton battled each other hard in Bahrain everybody loved it- but was it ‘sensible’?
Let me tell you all this; Verstappen is going nowhere, because otherwise Mercedes or Ferrari will sign him in a heartbeat.
Last but not least, here the link to the incident and please show me the multiple moves Max made, that aren’t allowed?
https://youtu.be/36YFQTFzZwU
Max drove the entire back straight on the left side, so that was his racing line- he once moved a bit to the middle and than moved back to the left which was he racing line to begin with.
There was even space left between Max and the wall, but Ricciardo didn’t not go there to avoid a crash- he couldn’t anymore- because he misjudged the situation.
Sieper wrote:Haha, yes that is a bit pushing it by Hammy! Perhaps on purpose
Yes what Phil said, 100%.Phil wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:08Actually, the racing line most commonly referred to the quickest way around the track, which will be pretty equal for 90% of the time for all cars.George-Jung wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:01The racing line is not a fixed thing; it is the line you’re racing at the moment of time from where onwards you could make ‘moves’.. because you are always allowed to move back to side from where you initiated the move (incase there is room).
Isn’t racing always ‘reactive driving’- at least when you’re attack/defending??Phil wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:08
Even so, you're ignoring the obvious, and that is Verstappen's reactive driving. Dan pulls to the right, Max follows to the right (and opens the gap on the left). Dan pulls to the left, Verstappen pulls back to the left. However small those movements are, Dan reacted back to them and ultimately was committed to a move that no longer worked.
EDIT: And no, it isn't legal. One move is allowed to stop this from happening, other wise you could pretty much use your car as a dynamic obstacle and prevent any overtake from happening (at the risk of provoking a dangerous accident).