Who says?
When Max moved under braking, they gave penalty to Rosberg
Her is another example, watch Alonso on Vettel. He ran him right of the track and no penalty.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 19:26Charles definitely deserved a penalty for that all day long. And Lewis is closer to borderline as he IS substantially ahead, but I could see why he would be penalised
It caused slow speed contact, not an accident. Contact itself is not a punishable offense.sosic2121 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 19:35Yes(although I don't agree with it), but this time it caused accident.dans79 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 17:48It's been an unspoken allowed move for a long time. In other words the drivers and stewards have always allowed a driver overtaking on the inside to squeeze the defending driver out. Caveats beings it has to be done in a way that doesn't endanger the defending driver, or cause an accident. You can literally see this almost every season.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 17:24Isn't squeezing someone to the apex that late (as Max was only alongside very late) moving around in the braking zone. I thought that wasn't allowed.
Scrap that. Max has been doing/getting away with that for years.
That's because of how Rosberg positioned his car, he gave max no chance of ever making the turn (assuming you mean Germany 2016).
dans79 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 19:45Her is another example, watch Alonso on Vettel. He ran him right of the track and no penalty.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 19:26Charles definitely deserved a penalty for that all day long. And Lewis is closer to borderline as he IS substantially ahead, but I could see why he would be penalised
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiub1DnUnkg
Sorry about me not saying it was 2016 Germany.
Dude, please stop. Leclerc went for the penalty move aka schwalbe, he lost, game over try again next time. Please do the same and stop trying.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 20:41dans79 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 19:45Her is another example, watch Alonso on Vettel. He ran him right of the track and no penalty.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 19:26Charles definitely deserved a penalty for that all day long. And Lewis is closer to borderline as he IS substantially ahead, but I could see why he would be penalised
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiub1DnUnkg
Yeah and again, Alonso should have been penalised what's your point?
Even that incident Vettel is on the radio saying "he can't just run me off the road like that" and Alonso was someone who said "you must always leave space".
The drivers all know the rules, but they know the FIA and Stewards are soft touches and can bail out of giving penalties for what should be handing them out for.
All most of the fans want is consistency, they are currently being consistently --- at upholding the law on track! Canada they did the right thing, Austria they didn't.
All you keep doing is showing me times when the stewards were being crap. I already know they are crap, I don't need showing over and over.
We will have to agree to disagree then, because the stewards have been allowing a defending driver to be squeezed out on turn exit for a while now, and i see nothing wrong with it.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 20:41All you keep doing is showing me times when the stewards were being crap. I already know they are crap, I don't need showing over and over.
Trying what? 8 can't change the decision, I know that. And I'm certainly not alone when it comes to people thinking max should have penalised. You shouldn't be able to run someone off the track when side by side. You cant even do that in nascar. But now its OK in F1epo wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 20:48Dude, please stop. Leclerc went for the penalty move aka schwalbe, he lost, game over try again next time. Please do the same and stop trying.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 20:41dans79 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 19:45
Her is another example, watch Alonso on Vettel. He ran him right of the track and no penalty.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiub1DnUnkg
Yeah and again, Alonso should have been penalised what's your point?
Even that incident Vettel is on the radio saying "he can't just run me off the road like that" and Alonso was someone who said "you must always leave space".
The drivers all know the rules, but they know the FIA and Stewards are soft touches and can bail out of giving penalties for what should be handing them out for.
All most of the fans want is consistency, they are currently being consistently --- at upholding the law on track! Canada they did the right thing, Austria they didn't.
All you keep doing is showing me times when the stewards were being crap. I already know they are crap, I don't need showing over and over.
So your saying max gave Leclerc chance to make the turn?dans79 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 20:53We will have to agree to disagree then, because the stewards have been allowing a defending driver to be squeezed out on turn exit for a while now, and i see nothing wrong with it.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 20:41All you keep doing is showing me times when the stewards were being crap. I already know they are crap, I don't need showing over and over.
The only time it ever gets a penalty is in one of the following cases.
- Driver on the inside isn't under full control of their car, and causes an incident. (Max on Vettel last year in china)
- Driver on the inside gives the defending driver no chance of making the turn (Nico on Max in Germany 2016)
At the time of 2016 German Grand Prix, the no moving under breaking rule wasn't in effect, and was thus allowed as long as it wasn't considered a blocking move. If memory serves the Max rule didn't go into effect until the United states Grand Prix or right after it.
On the outside no, but based on the circumstances of the incident Charles had the option and more tan enough space and time to cut up the inside, but he chose to risk it around the outside, Hence the reason why it was deemed a racing incident.
Max's on-board seems supportive of the Stewards decision:https://youtu.be/AgF-yYWmpOU?t=407dans79 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2019, 21:31On the outside no, but based on the circumstances of the incident Charles had the option and more tan enough space and time to cut up the inside, but he chose to risk it around the outside, Hence the reason why it was deemed a racing incident.
Charles made the decision to go around the outside with full knowledge that a driver on the inside with a compromised line is always going to run wide on exit (as he himself did last year in Japan).
The Stewards specifically stated, 'We did not consider that either driver was wholly or predominantly to blame for the incident.', and this is why Max didn't get a penalty.
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/ ... AAZPo6.jpg