GPR-A wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:47
Verstappen was right, in the sense that he maintained the inside line, just like every driver does to protect being overtaken. Last year Hamilton did that in Spa and he could hold on to the position. Verstappen then used the rule of one move, went to the right and came back to the original position. That does not constitute "Weaving" and is perfectly legal.
I am not sure i agree mate. One move is one move. What you are referring to is “moving back to the racing line” which is tolerated at best as long as you are not crowding a car.
In the case of Max and we assume the move to the right was his one-defensive-move, moving back to the left would put him even further away from the racing line.
If Max’s one move was to the left, then to some degree would he be allowed to move back to the ‘racing line’ and give himself a better opportunity at making the corner (again, as long as it is not to the detriment of the other driver).
What you are suggesting (moving right than left) is dangerous and in any circumstance would provoke way more dangerous collisions.
GPR-A wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 17:47
Go on breaks. As a racing driver, you should always be prepared to avoid a collision while you are coming from behind.
You know that aint possible. Imagine being on the highway and you are doing 20kmh more than cars on the lane next to you. Then suddenly a car pulls in front of you 5-10 meters ahead. Is braking the magical solution too?
I’m sorry, but if there is a car coming fast from behind with a large speed differential, there’s only so much you can expect from him when moving directly into his path in a blocking manner. Simply putting the responsibility at the car behind for not braking is a weak argument if you did your move at the very last moment.