Sieper wrote: ↑17 May 2018, 14:34
Are people suggesting that, or are people simply disagreeing (with for example Andres) to put all the blame on Max? Max wasn't in the middle of the road yet at the beginning of the clash, he moved towards the outside when Ric started the fakey, he had to do that in case Ric would be going around the outside to make it as tough as possible for him to go around the outside (but the option was still very much on the table) and in fact Ric had tried like 3 or 4 times around the outside already this race, but even with the momentum advantage, if you go around the outside (and Max makes the radius of that corner big enough) Max has the two next corners (to the left) to defend his position (which is how he successfully fended of Rics earlier attempts). It was Rics decision to then go to the inside, Ric made the call, he was trying to overtake. That Max then closes the door (with, what truthfully was only a slight move, watch the head on camera images to see that) was something Ric apparently did not expect as indeed he was unable to brake in time anymore. I don't agree Max had to let him through, Ric was still more then fully behind.
What you are describing here is called "blocking" and/or "weaving": Max making two moves, both in reaction to what was happening behind him. What do you think happens when a car behind is closing at 10m/s and attempts an overtake on the right side (which has a big gap), only to then see the driver in front move in reaction to that and close that gap, then the driver, now 20+m closer, goes for the inside where there is a new gap and Max moves again and closes that too?
If this was/is a legitimate defensive tactic, then it would pretty much make overtaking impossible, as a defending driver could just use his car as a road-block and react to every movement that happens behind, irrespective of speed differential.
No, Max doesn't have to wave Daniel through, but there should also be (are) limits on how far a driver can go to use himself as a road-block without becoming a danger to himself and others.
Up until the end of 2017, this was clearly defined in the regulations and stipulated that a driver can only make one defensive-move (and then commit to that move). Obviously this means that if Max wants to defend by moving to the outside, then he is free to do that, but then he must stay there. Unfortunately, the FIA decided to remove this article from the sporting regulations and replace it with a more generalized article/paragraph that gives the stewards more freedom in deciding what is dangerous/erratic etc. The one-defensive-move rule is there (e.g. weaving is still prohibited), but the stewards have more leeway under the more generalized formulated regulations.