Just a bit over the top -- not that MANY of the posts here haven't been!Whilst to you it is clear that Lewis blatantly and deliberately broke the rules and should be punished, the rest of the world cannot see any infraction or need for punishment.
That's not the rule. The rule says you should not "gain advantage". Hamilton himself said after the race that he did not wanted Kimi to fly away (or something like that, I already quoted him) so he did not lift completely. I think that's the reason for the penalty: he gained an advantage. So, that's the reason the stewards have (plus the telemetry, I imagine).WhiteBlue wrote:...Hamilton has even let Reikkonen past completely...
I'd normally agree but this event has incited an overwhelmingly negative news articles about it. Very few look at it from a technical infringement point of view and largely condemn it. This is the sort of thing that could just as easily turn people off watching and, probably more importantly, discourage many sponsors from becoming involved.DaveKillens wrote:And exactly who benefits from this controversial decision? The puppet master, Bernie....
with all due respect I think you are in error here. The advantage of a racing driver is his track position and momentum compared to his respective opponent.Ciro Pabón wrote:That's not the rule. The rule says you should not "gain advantage". Hamilton himself said after the race that he did not wanted Kimi to fly away (or something like that, I already quoted him) so he did not lift completely. I think that's the reason for the penalty: he gained an advantage. So, that's the reason the stewards have (plus the telemetry, I imagine)...WhiteBlue wrote:...Hamilton has even let Reikkonen past completely...
Both good points. People want consistency and not random punishment of events which happen 20 or more times in every F1 race.WhiteBlue wrote:The stewards reason for the penalty is not convincing and is inconsistent with the practise in F1....
...Charlie oked it but later reported it to the stewards according to Ferrari. The man certainly has to explain something....
WhieBlue, this is a bit too much. "Calculated race rigging"? Take a deep breath and count to 10.the longer this farce continues the more I am getting convinced that this wasn't just ineptitude but calculated race rigging.
.WhiteBlue wrote:for me this is smelly. Ferrari say they did not protest and the stewards investigated due to Whiting reporting the incident. there are several questions.
Doesn't either scenario make sense?"Is race control reporting such incidents routinely to the stewards or are they only reported when race control feels a penalty may be appropriate?"
Are they not allowed to do so? In fact, shouldn't that be their responsibility?"Have the stewards started that investigation basically on their own initiative?"
As an "advisor" should he not have advised them?"What role did the stewards advisor Alan Donnelly play in that investigation?"
He is supposed to advised the stewards to help with consistency of the decision making. It appears that his effort has produced just the opposite outcome. the decision is inconsistent and nobody known any more what is required when you miss a corner
The full article can be found here; Autosport- Trulli: Hamilton gained an advantageIn my opinion Hamilton got an advantage by cutting the chicane," Trulli told Gazzetta dello Sport. "Had he stayed on the road, he wouldn't have had the speed to overtake the Ferrari.
"In the same way at Monza someone could cut the first chicane, catch a rival's draft, and overtake him under braking at Roggia.
"When you attack on the outside, you do it at your own risk, because who's on the inside has the right to do the corner. If there isn't enough room, then you lift.
"Had there been a wall there, instead of the surfaced escape route, would Lewis have attacked anyway? Had there been gravel, he wouldn't have had the chance to attack when rejoining the track because of dirty tyres."