It is deliberate but it is not trolling. They have been doing it for ages now. A minuscule percentage of fans are too sensitive it seems.
haha.. nice whatif storyGrandAxe wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 17:58Ferrari is in deep crisis with drivers. Kimi is approaching the end of his career, while Vettel's mistakes cost them the title last year and could do so this year as well.tranquility2k4 wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 13:54...
On another note if Vettel's mistakes do cost him the WDC then this is arguably the 2nd in a row he will have lost (although last year there were mechanical issues too). Surely some people at Ferrari must be thinking if Alonso was there they would have won, or would have been much closer. This may sound ridiculous, but if Vettel messes up again over the next race or two, could we see Ferrari make a dramatic U-turn and sign up Alonso to be his team mate for 2019? If not next year then surely if Vettel doesn't deliver in 2019 they would consider him for 2020?
Its not impossible that Leclerc might actually be coming in to both replace Vettel and be tutored for a year by Kimi. The reason for that suspicion is that in the last few races Ferrari has let go of aggressively using Kimi to back Vettel, letting them race instead, even when it could be costly (like last weekend). It almost looks like they are wanting to see how an unfettered Kimi would do in a fair fight with Vettel.
Maybe its a long shot, but who knows?
the problem is not that he doesnt know about the rules....he knows them but the FIA has let him free reign all these years, so he abuses them.iotar__ wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 19:01How are these not 2 defensive moves on the straight against a tow?
https://i.imgur.com/stIxSXM.jpg
Compare Raikkonen - Hamilton defending or any other overtake.
Verstappen should get another penalty for not understanding basics of rules and racing. FIA allowed him to cheat so many times, including changing the rules afterwards to cover cheating, that you can't blame only him.
Do you have something "non-whatif" to explain Ferrari's recent behaviour? It would be nice to read your thoughts (if any).foxmulder_ms wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 18:41haha.. nice whatif storyGrandAxe wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 17:58Ferrari is in deep crisis with drivers. Kimi is approaching the end of his career, while Vettel's mistakes cost them the title last year and could do so this year as well.tranquility2k4 wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 13:54...
On another note if Vettel's mistakes do cost him the WDC then this is arguably the 2nd in a row he will have lost (although last year there were mechanical issues too). Surely some people at Ferrari must be thinking if Alonso was there they would have won, or would have been much closer. This may sound ridiculous, but if Vettel messes up again over the next race or two, could we see Ferrari make a dramatic U-turn and sign up Alonso to be his team mate for 2019? If not next year then surely if Vettel doesn't deliver in 2019 they would consider him for 2020?
Its not impossible that Leclerc might actually be coming in to both replace Vettel and be tutored for a year by Kimi. The reason for that suspicion is that in the last few races Ferrari has let go of aggressively using Kimi to back Vettel, letting them race instead, even when it could be costly (like last weekend). It almost looks like they are wanting to see how an unfettered Kimi would do in a fair fight with Vettel.
Maybe its a long shot, but who knows?
Especially with the radio message; if it was deliberate, how then was it not trolling? That sort of radio message is something that is definitely not of the sort that's been going on for ages.foxmulder_ms wrote:It is deliberate but it is not trolling. They have been doing it for ages now. A minuscule percentage of fans are too sensitive it seems.
Perhaps 'Id' would be a better word and I suspect all successful sportspeople share that 'weakness'. If you don't have that innate confidence and drive to beat your peers then I think it would be difficult to sustain the extreme level of commitment and performance needed. In order to maintain that, I think you need to be able to prove to yourself that you can outperform your peers. Easiest way to do that is to beat them, worst outcome is to have them outperform you.
I suspect Hamilton thinks he could've defended better initially and he definitely performed worse at the restart despite having managed to 'go' with Vettel when the leader floored it. His performance here will have thoroughly buried any slight doubts that might have begun gnawing at him following those mistakes.
As have plenty of drivers. I have quite a lot of sympathy when it's done in the heat of the moment and during the unanticipated dueling a driver finds himself operating beyond his skill / decision making ability for an instant (see Max and Bottas this race and numerous examples in previous GPs) but I struggle to understand the lack of scenario 'gaming' done to cover eventualities on a first lap or a SC restart. There are essentially two likely overtaking points and it appears that Vettel and Ferrari didn't bother to think about either of them beforehand. It just boggles my mind.
I think it is very hard to come to a conclusion when we cannot even agree on who was in front. Pity.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 04:36You can only squeeze if the driver is slightly behind, not in the braking zone and you MUST leave enough space to hold a cars width AND you must show no intent to cause a collision.Edax wrote: ↑02 Sep 2018, 23:22
Apparenly the first chicane. Vettel does the exact same thing to Hamilton when they enter the corner. In fact Hamilton has two wheels over the white line and there is not much but a hair between their front tires.
But I do agree, squeezing an opponent before a corner is fair, but these actions were too much. A cars width should be measured between the car and the inside of the white line, not whatever driveable surface is out there. So the penalty is OK.
But I also can understand. The Red Bull is currently in no mans land, 30 seconds adrift of the next car. Ves could land a comfortable fifth in any race, with the engine tuned down. But you would only see the car at the start and in the result table.
Smart thing, points wise, would have been to have Bottas pass on lap 5 and concentrate on fending of vettel. But by taking the fight to Mercedes, it may have cost him 2 points, but gained RB 30 mins of tv coverage, and showed his possible future (2020) employer Mercedes, that he has the measure on Bottas. But in order to be able to do that he has to take everything out of the car and the rules there is, since the car is not quick enough.
verstappen broke all those requirements.
That’s what I don’t get. Exactly who does he think he was causing an issue for?Wynters wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 20:09Perhaps 'Id' would be a better word and I suspect all successful sportspeople share that 'weakness'. If you don't have that innate confidence and drive to beat your peers then I think it would be difficult to sustain the extreme level of commitment and performance needed. In order to maintain that, I think you need to be able to prove to yourself that you can outperform your peers. Easiest way to do that is to beat them, worst outcome is to have them outperform you.I suspect Hamilton thinks he could've defended better initially and he definitely performed worse at the restart despite having managed to 'go' with Vettel when the leader floored it. His performance here will have thoroughly buried any slight doubts that might have begun gnawing at him following those mistakes.As have plenty of drivers. I have quite a lot of sympathy when it's done in the heat of the moment and during the unanticipated dueling a driver finds himself operating beyond his skill / decision making ability for an instant (see Max and Bottas this race and numerous examples in previous GPs) but I struggle to understand the lack of scenario 'gaming' done to cover eventualities on a first lap or a SC restart. There are essentially two likely overtaking points and it appears that Vettel and Ferrari didn't bother to think about either of them beforehand. It just boggles my mind.
Max's decision to continue to screw himself after the incident whilst simultaneously not hurting Bottas in any way confuses me the same way. It's outside the instant the mistake was made so surely logic should kick in and, if it habitually won't, then that should've been identified as an issue and (much as Smedley did with Massa) his engineer should be placed in a recognised position to handle it for him. i.e. "Stop being an idiot, you aren't hurting him at all you are only hurting yourself." It's genuinely concerning that the engineer was obviously convinced that Max was too childish to accept not only his failure but also to accept that blocking Bottas would cost Bottas nothing. Otherwise he would have explained it to him and Max would've finished fourth.
I can imagine the team disagrees. RedBull likes fighters. For a driver there is a order of importance for finishing. 1. a win, 2nd in front of your team mate and 3 podium and 4 points. VER is out of contention of the WC and got his teammate covered. A podium was too far away after the penalty and points were there whatever he decided. Now he and his team can stand up tall, one of the Mercedeses needed a penalty to beat us today. Although not really true, he deserved this penalty and with a few inches more room Bottas might had a good overtake, it's the spirit they love and push.Restomaniac wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 20:42That’s what I don’t get. Exactly who does he think he was causing an issue for?Wynters wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 20:09Perhaps 'Id' would be a better word and I suspect all successful sportspeople share that 'weakness'. If you don't have that innate confidence and drive to beat your peers then I think it would be difficult to sustain the extreme level of commitment and performance needed. In order to maintain that, I think you need to be able to prove to yourself that you can outperform your peers. Easiest way to do that is to beat them, worst outcome is to have them outperform you.I suspect Hamilton thinks he could've defended better initially and he definitely performed worse at the restart despite having managed to 'go' with Vettel when the leader floored it. His performance here will have thoroughly buried any slight doubts that might have begun gnawing at him following those mistakes.As have plenty of drivers. I have quite a lot of sympathy when it's done in the heat of the moment and during the unanticipated dueling a driver finds himself operating beyond his skill / decision making ability for an instant (see Max and Bottas this race and numerous examples in previous GPs) but I struggle to understand the lack of scenario 'gaming' done to cover eventualities on a first lap or a SC restart. There are essentially two likely overtaking points and it appears that Vettel and Ferrari didn't bother to think about either of them beforehand. It just boggles my mind.
Max's decision to continue to screw himself after the incident whilst simultaneously not hurting Bottas in any way confuses me the same way. It's outside the instant the mistake was made so surely logic should kick in and, if it habitually won't, then that should've been identified as an issue and (much as Smedley did with Massa) his engineer should be placed in a recognised position to handle it for him. i.e. "Stop being an idiot, you aren't hurting him at all you are only hurting yourself." It's genuinely concerning that the engineer was obviously convinced that Max was too childish to accept not only his failure but also to accept that blocking Bottas would cost Bottas nothing. Otherwise he would have explained it to him and Max would've finished fourth.
The Stewards-Probably laughing their what-nots off over the reaction.
Bottas-definitely laughing his what-nots off and being more than happy to sit there and pick up 3rd.
Vettel-definitely laughing his what-nots off and being more than happy to make up the time and pick up 4th.
‘I know I’m going to lose time to Vettel but I don’t care’ was probably one of the strangest statements I have ever heard. It defies any logic to hurt nobody but himself and his team.
Even if he sat in a far quicker Bottas’ DRS/tow for a lap or so. That was where the logical thinking would take you. Max Verstappen had other ideas.
What Verstappen did wasn’t fighting it was just poor racing AGAIN.Jolle wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 20:56I can imagine the team disagrees. RedBull likes fighters. For a driver there is a order of importance for finishing. 1. a win, 2nd in front of your team mate and 3 podium and 4 points. VER is out of contention of the WC and got his teammate covered. A podium was too far away after the penalty and points were there whatever he decided. Now he and his team can stand up tall, one of the Mercedeses needed a penalty to beat us today. Although not really true, he deserved this penalty and with a few inches more room Bottas might had a good overtake, it's the spirit they love and push.Restomaniac wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 20:42That’s what I don’t get. Exactly who does he think he was causing an issue for?Wynters wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 20:09Perhaps 'Id' would be a better word and I suspect all successful sportspeople share that 'weakness'. If you don't have that innate confidence and drive to beat your peers then I think it would be difficult to sustain the extreme level of commitment and performance needed. In order to maintain that, I think you need to be able to prove to yourself that you can outperform your peers. Easiest way to do that is to beat them, worst outcome is to have them outperform you.
I suspect Hamilton thinks he could've defended better initially and he definitely performed worse at the restart despite having managed to 'go' with Vettel when the leader floored it. His performance here will have thoroughly buried any slight doubts that might have begun gnawing at him following those mistakes.
As have plenty of drivers. I have quite a lot of sympathy when it's done in the heat of the moment and during the unanticipated dueling a driver finds himself operating beyond his skill / decision making ability for an instant (see Max and Bottas this race and numerous examples in previous GPs) but I struggle to understand the lack of scenario 'gaming' done to cover eventualities on a first lap or a SC restart. There are essentially two likely overtaking points and it appears that Vettel and Ferrari didn't bother to think about either of them beforehand. It just boggles my mind.
Max's decision to continue to screw himself after the incident whilst simultaneously not hurting Bottas in any way confuses me the same way. It's outside the instant the mistake was made so surely logic should kick in and, if it habitually won't, then that should've been identified as an issue and (much as Smedley did with Massa) his engineer should be placed in a recognised position to handle it for him. i.e. "Stop being an idiot, you aren't hurting him at all you are only hurting yourself." It's genuinely concerning that the engineer was obviously convinced that Max was too childish to accept not only his failure but also to accept that blocking Bottas would cost Bottas nothing. Otherwise he would have explained it to him and Max would've finished fourth.
The Stewards-Probably laughing their what-nots off over the reaction.
Bottas-definitely laughing his what-nots off and being more than happy to sit there and pick up 3rd.
Vettel-definitely laughing his what-nots off and being more than happy to make up the time and pick up 4th.
‘I know I’m going to lose time to Vettel but I don’t care’ was probably one of the strangest statements I have ever heard. It defies any logic to hurt nobody but himself and his team.
The alternative is 20 boring drivers who won't fight, leave lots and lots of space and drive around in the exact order of their cars speed.
.How much of that was due to their failure to bring one extra set of Soft tyres?
.I’m sorry but if you force another car to go via the polystyrene bollards into turn 1 in normal racing in Monza then you had better be ready for a penalty. I don’t care who you are.