saviour stivala wrote: ↑12 Jun 2019, 09:49
Shrieker wrote: ↑11 Jun 2019, 23:35
mzso wrote: ↑11 Jun 2019, 22:58
How?
A time penalty for rejoining in an unsafe manner would be an incentive enough not to do it, but if let's say you're only obligated to relinquish your position when you do it, you might rejoin unsafely and retain your position anyway since the worst that can happen is being forced to relinquish your position. Ergo the position you kept illegally could be used to hamper the driver behind. Actually I think this was discussed here; Vettel could've held up Ham much more thru the twisty sections in sector 1 to help Lec catch him.
“relinquish your position back?” it’s not like anybody was overtaken by somebody having cut a corner or by going off track. And to make that gentleman (whatshisname?) laugh some more, What was the difference in Canada from that of Monaco 2016?.
From a morale (!!!) standpoint, truth to be told if you punish Vettel for his mistake, there is certainly an argument to be made that Hamilton should have been punished.
However, morale and ethics mean nothing, absolutely nothing in F1. What the drivers do is not judged ethically, but judged by the sporting regulations. Do those regulations always represent good behaviour, safety and sportmanship? Usually yes, but not always.
And that is why you get the difference between Hamilton and Vettel. There is no bias going, there is no favorism going on for Hamilton or Mercedes. There are people that are claiming that, but that's because they misunderstand the way the sport is judged (which frankly is not surprising because the regulations can be confusing).
Let me explain why Hamilton was not punished despite arguably unsportmanship behaviour. Hamilton left the track, just like Vettel, but crucially re-entered the track in a
safe manner. He came back on the track between turn 10 and 11 of the Nouvelle Chicane, which is extremely low speed. The closing speed between the 2 was very low in those few meters. Hamilton was back on the track. However, the controversial point is that Hamilton was positioned very badly to exit turn 11, which gave Ricciardo a gap to dive into. Hamilton, having rejoined competition, proceeded to squeeze Ricciardo. He did leave a car width for Ricciardo there (and really not an inch more than that). The result was that Hamilton did not break a regulation. Even though the poor exit out of turn 11 was a direct consequence of him getting back on track on a poor approach line. Here is the video so you can check for yourself:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGzDkb3UW0w
Vettel however reëntered the track while the closing speed between him and Hamilton was really large because Hamilton exited his corner full on the throttle while Vettel was still loosing speed getting the car back under control. Hamilton was very obviously hindered by Vettel going back onto the track. That is what made it an unsafe return to the track.
Again this is according to the rules. One got punished while the other didn't because of these crucial but circumstantial details. The penalties are applied correct according to those rules. However, morally speaking you can perfectly argue the 2 situations are so similar it is not fair to have in one situation a penalty applied and not in the other. If turn 10 in Monaco exited into a straight and Hamilton did same pinching manoeuvre after rentering the track, that certainly would have been classified as a unsafe reëntry of the track, because the closing speed would have been much higher.
I do hate Vettel is now claiming "F1 is not the sport anymore I fell in love with". Clearly controversial ruling has happened as well when he was just a few years in F1. The last few years he has just been on the receiving end of it, while in other years others were. Spa 2008 immediately comes to mind. Him complaining about how the sport changed for the worst now that he receives this, again as can be classified controversial, penalty, is hypocritical. He had more than enough time to lament where the sport is going, but he didn't. Infact, should the reverse have happened, Hamilton in front going off track and Vettel being squeezed, he would have done the same as Hamilton, go on the radio to complain Hamilton returned unsafely to the track. Ferrari would have lotched protest, and they would have claimed that penalty was fair.
For the record, unsafe return to the track has nothing to do with gaining an advantage. Vettel was not punished for that.