All Ocon needed to do in the weigh in room was say
"Put me in the same car as you, and see what happens you little ####"
But he comes from a background with a troubling reputation for violence. In 2000 Max’s father Jos, while still an F1 driver, was found guilty of fracturing a 45-year-old man’s skull in a fight at a kart track two years earlier. He avoided a prison sentence after an out-of-court settlement was reached.
This was not a one-off. In 2008 the elder Verstappen received another suspended jail sentence when he breached a restraining order against former wife Sophie Kumpen – Max’s mother – when he was found to have send her threatening messages. He had another brush with the law following an alleged assault of a former girlfriend in 2012. Just last year he was arrested again following a fight at a beach club.
That's now what I mean!
Yet the Bible is rife with people being cursed for seven generations. And in the words of someone disinguished whose name I can't remember: “children never do as their parents say, but they never fail to do as they do”
Finally, Some sense and something actually on topic, the Brazil 2018 race.Edax wrote: ↑12 Nov 2018, 23:30I don’t think Verstappen ever expected him to be there. If you are wheel to wheel you can tough it out together in that corner, but that usually requires some wheel banging and copious amount of curb. If you are only partially aside you lift and slot in behind for the next straight, you don’t hang around.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑12 Nov 2018, 22:19https://i.imgur.com/EJZr2Iu.jpg
Verstappen knew there was a car beside him, yet he goes so close to the apex that he nearly touches the white line.
What did he think was gonna happen?
The rule says you have to give each other space. The rules do not say you are allowed to stick your nose into any closing gap and expect the other to see you and yield.
Ocon’s second move would have been penalised if it was for a position. Just look at Stroll vs Alonso. Even though there was a car next to Alonso he could have easily given more space, if he knew Stroll was there. But the point is Stroll should not have put himself in this position, nor should Alonso be required to anticipate on someone being there.
That is why Stroll got a drive-through for “causing a collision” and so did Ocon. The fact that it was an unlapping maneuvre, only makes it more incomprehensible to understand what was going through Ocon’s brain.
https://formularapida.net/wp-content/up ... onso-1.jpg
It's prejudging to just assume it. What Jos Verstappen did was terrible, and I honestly believe Jos Verstappen is among the lowest of humanity. However, that does not give us the right to project that onto his son just like that. Persons can become entirely different people than their own parents. Maybe you are also forgetting he actually has a good and caring mother.dans79 wrote: ↑13 Nov 2018, 00:09That's now what I mean!
A substantial number of children who grow up in a violent environment, become violent themselves as they age. Many studies have shown this, and i have witnessed it first hand (on several occasions), as at one point in my life I went to a school that had a lot of poor kids who had bad home lives.
But all the way after the braking zone, Ocon was beside Max. It's not like Max was in front and Ocon stuck his nose there, he never left Max's side after the braking zone.Edax wrote: ↑12 Nov 2018, 23:30I don’t think Verstappen ever expected him to be there. If you are wheel to wheel you can tough it out together in that corner, but that usually requires some wheel banging and copious amount of curb. If you are only partially aside you lift and slot in behind for the next straight, you don’t hang around.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑12 Nov 2018, 22:19https://i.imgur.com/EJZr2Iu.jpg
Verstappen knew there was a car beside him, yet he goes so close to the apex that he nearly touches the white line.
What did he think was gonna happen?
The rule says you have to give each other space. The rules do not say you are allowed to stick your nose into any closing gap and expect the other to see you and yield.
Ocon’s second move would have been penalised if it was for a position. Just look at Stroll vs Alonso. Even though there was a car next to Alonso he could have easily given more space, if he knew Stroll was there. But the point is Stroll should not have put himself in this position, nor should Alonso be required to anticipate on someone being there.
That is why Stroll got a drive-through for “causing a collision” and so did Ocon. The fact that it was an unlapping maneuvre, only makes it more incomprehensible to understand what was going through Ocon’s brain.
https://formularapida.net/wp-content/up ... onso-1.jpg
There's possibly something in this.dans79 wrote: ↑12 Nov 2018, 23:49Can anyone validate these statements? if true they explain a lot.
https://www.racefans.net/2018/11/12/why ... ving-ocon/
But he comes from a background with a troubling reputation for violence. In 2000 Max’s father Jos, while still an F1 driver, was found guilty of fracturing a 45-year-old man’s skull in a fight at a kart track two years earlier. He avoided a prison sentence after an out-of-court settlement was reached.This was not a one-off. In 2008 the elder Verstappen received another suspended jail sentence when he breached a restraining order against former wife Sophie Kumpen – Max’s mother – when he was found to have send her threatening messages. He had another brush with the law following an alleged assault of a former girlfriend in 2012. Just last year he was arrested again following a fight at a beach club.
Well let's get the most obvious ones out of the way:
You seem to be taking this semi personally Turbo.
How is this relevant? The only relevant point was, that at that point Ocon was faster. It's the same if you'd compare two cars A and B, one on a two stop race, the other on a one. Both cars finish the race at the same time, but one car will be doing significantly faster lap times and its strategy relies on 'getting through traffic'. It's not that dissimilar to races before 2010 when teams could opt to drive with more fuel (less stops) vs ulterior strategy on less fuel but then getting by traffic to make the strategy work.NL_Fer wrote: ↑12 Nov 2018, 21:15The Redbull was about 1s faster on average. Ocon would not keep up for more than a handfull of laps. The wake of the Force India would compromise Verstappens aero/race. He would be smarter to let Ocon some room, than go sidebyside to the 2nd straight and push him outward in the double left.