WaikeCU wrote: ↑01 Jul 2019, 09:43
Not penalizing does send a message for the future. Whenever you have a driver hugging the outside line in a turn, just take the normal line so that the other drivers drives into disappearing space and has to brake or take avoiding action.
THere has really always been a rule for this. Inside driver ahead at apex then he's allowed racing line which if that is on the outside means they can run the other driver out wide. The outside driver is not entitled to space so has a choice to attempt to fight and force the other driver to leave space or concede the position and slipstream.
If the outside driver is ahead at apex (and ahead means cms, not half a car length) then the driver is entitled to space and the inside driver would get penalised for running them out wide.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/13159 ... pa-penalty
This was generally always accepted as the rules of racing, the FIA clarified the rule and Charlie repeatedly explained this to the drivers. I believe in the drivers meeting before the next race the drivers asked why one guy got a penalty and another didn't and Charlie again explained it.
In this case Verstappen was ahead at apex (very marginally) and was entitled to the line, in general that is a very consistent decision. I would say that in Brazil in 2016 that Verstappen was actually behind at apex and pushed Vettel off and strictly speaking deserved a penalty but the mitigating circumstance there were the conditions, there was spray into the corner which meant Vettel would have been very hard to see and frankly he had no reason to expect Vettel to be there. He was like 1-2 seconds faster a lap and blowing everyone away, there was no competition really, if he doesn't get the position there he gets it 2 corners further up the track so Vettel fighting back was both pretty much invisible and not expected.
Strictly speaking I'd call the Brazil one an odd one out and not entirely consistent but had mitigating circumstances. In normal weather and really when the move is being made into the corner these decisions are pretty consistent.
I think if Leclerc had been a few inches ahead at the apex then a penalty would be quite likely to be given, which again would have been consistent.
This also has nothing to do with Vettel's penalty. Vettel didn't make the corner, he lost any claim to rights to any line as he was rejoining and frankly he got the penalty because after rejoining and after gaining control he just chose to push Hamilton off when he was well alongside and at that point it was on the straight. Corners and straights have different rules. You can't choose to push someone off who is alongside, that was realistically what Vettel's penalty was actually for and though the situation came up because of going off track it had not much to do with it. If Vettel continues turning left as he was he would have left space but lost the position, it was his choice to close the gap and push Ham off track hence the penalty.