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W.T.F
Oh boo hoo!WhiteBlue wrote:This is a black day for the sport. The behavior of the race director and the stewards was very dubious. The court should have looked into this and made an exception.![]()
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shame on:
Mr Alan DONNELLY (Stewards Advisor)
Mr Charlie WHITING (Race Director)
Mr Philippe NARMINO (Presiding Judge Monaco)
Mr Xavier CONESA (Judge Spain)
Mr Harry DUIJM (Judge Netherlands)
Mr Thierry JULLIARD (Judge Switzerland)
Mr Erich SEDELMAYER (Judge Austria)
for letting this happen. you are a disgrace for F1!!
Niki Lauda wrote:"This is the worst judgement in the history of F1. It's absolutely unacceptable when three (stewards) influence the championship like this."
We can now include the names of the 7 men above.
Dodgy ?Sawtooth-spike wrote:I like this bit
Or in English if we decide on a penalty they is *uck all u can do. If this is the case why did it even get this far?The Court of appeal pointed to paragraph 5 of article 152 of the International Sporting Code which reads as follows:
"Penalties of driving through or stopping in pit lanes together with certain penalties specified in FIA Championship regulations where this is expressly stated, are not susceptible to appeal."
It all seems a little dodgy to me
But as had been already said its done, move on.
Just hope if massa wins this year that he does not win by 1 or 2 points or there could be a storm.
Those refs are trained professionals something the FIA/F1 lacks.woohoo wrote: Dodgy ?
Ever see a soccer match ?
Those cards that the men in black shirts and shorts give to the players, do you think they are debatable ???
I do not have a man. And I'm definetely not a McLaren fan. Quite the opposite. I usually support Ferrari and Massa or Kimi. The point is that Hamilton did not make an illegal pass. The stewards dreamed up an issue to manipulate the championship. And that is really bad news for the sport I like and have followed for 20 years.woohoo wrote:Oh boo hoo!WhiteBlue wrote:This is a black day for the sport. The behavior of the race director and the stewards was very dubious. The court should have looked into this and made an exception.![]()
![]()
shame on:
Mr Alan DONNELLY (Stewards Advisor)
Mr Charlie WHITING (Race Director)
Mr Philippe NARMINO (Presiding Judge Monaco)
Mr Xavier CONESA (Judge Spain)
Mr Harry DUIJM (Judge Netherlands)
Mr Thierry JULLIARD (Judge Switzerland)
Mr Erich SEDELMAYER (Judge Austria)
for letting this happen. you are a disgrace for F1!!
Niki Lauda wrote:"This is the worst judgement in the history of F1. It's absolutely unacceptable when three (stewards) influence the championship like this."
We can now include the names of the 7 men above.
I beleive you are one of those people who like the sport to be fair. But if its not going your way, its not fair.
Hammilton made an illegal pass, got penalized.
McLaren tried to appeal something that could not be appealed, and were pretty much "kicked out"
End of story, now get on with it, and hope your man wins in a clean fashion, or he might have to lose again.
Yes, if they gave them out retrospectively, ie after the game. But a more appropriate analogy is the refs awarding a goal just to negate whatever advantage the winning team may or may not have had as a result of their not awarding a penalty during the game. I think it says a lot, the devious misinformation tactics of the FIA in order to deem the appeal as inadmissible.Those cards that the men in black shirts and shorts give to the players, do you think they are debatable ???
In this "neo-modern"French federation (FFSA) president Nicolas Deschaux also voted against Mosley. "I have moral standards," said Deschaux.
He did...at least that what the stewards have decided... - shir0WhiteBlue wrote: ...The point is that Hamilton did not make an illegal pass.
ehem...WhiteBlue wrote: The stewards dreamed up an issue to manipulate the championship.
You must be kidding.Scotracer wrote:Dark, dark day for Formula 1.
Then if McLaren's basis for lodging their appeal is what you said...that they got clarification from the race director TWICE during the race and under his authority they kept the position...then they still are utterly wrong. Like the same rule you referred to says, the race director has no authority to impose or not to impose a penalty. That authority remains with the stewards.Scotracer wrote:Read the rest of the sentence that you had underlined. Mclaren got clarification from the race director TWICE during the race and under his authority they kept the position...
Clearly, myurr, you're referring to me. No problem. Is this the rule you're referring to?myurr wrote:Ps. To those rules lawyers stating that it's fact that Hamilton broke the rules, blah blah blah - it's fact that Massa broke the rules in Valencia (the FIA found him guilty of an unsafe pit release) and those same rules also state that it's both the drivers responsibility and that the punishment is the same as that for Hamiltons alleged offense (drive through or 25s penalty or 10 grid demotion at next race depending on when the offense occurred). Yet in that case he was just given a fine - I don't know how you can claim any moral authority for any other punishment being given to Hamilton. Or is that part of the rule book wrong and therefore shouldn't apply?