Exactly, one was minor contact while the other was accident which put other car off track, possibly into wall or something. Very dangerous stuff
Exactly, one was minor contact while the other was accident which put other car off track, possibly into wall or something. Very dangerous stuff
F1 politics. Verstappen winning in his home GP is good for the show, and also more teams beating Mercedes is good for the show.Alexf1 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 12:07What politics?Andres125sx wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 10:50Politics, the usual and aweful politics in F1...
What the stewads said:but there was clearly insufficient space for both cars to do so
What happened in the real world, on that lap and the previous one
If track doesn´t get narrower each lap, I think we can´t find a better example of an absurd decision based on politics as the argument used is just too ridiculous...
Andres125sx wrote: ↑01 Jul 2019, 14:12...
Anycase I agree this is done frequently in F1, and stewards usually are quite loose applying this rule. I can see the reason they didn´t penalize Max
Yeah it´s been done repeatedly in the past, but that´s not an excuse to push someone out of trackPhil wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 11:17I’m still just amused that the crowding on corner exit is such a big deal. It’s been done numerous times, time and time again. I also dont buy the excuses on why Leclerc avoided covering the inside. If he had done so, he would have forced Verstappen around the longer way around the corner and effectively done, what Max did to him instead. He didnt do it, he lost his strategic edge in that battle and there went the win.
Coming up with excuses and blaming it on the stewards post race is kind of weak when he could have done a better job at defending.
Ps: and as many know here, i’m really not a fan of Max’s racing ethics. But i’m not letting that cloud my judgement.
HereDiogoBrand wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 16:52Quick question:
Was there a drifting competition at the Red Bull Ring last weekend?
I just can't understand why there were those weird tyre marks leading into the short layout after turn 1.
https://scontent.fpet2-1.fna.fbcdn.net/ ... e=5DB8F8A6
That is great and all, but Max' steering input was much less on his second attempt.Alexf1 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 12:07What politics? There is a clear difference between the 2 attempts.Andres125sx wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 10:50Politics, the usual and aweful politics in F1...
What the stewads said:but there was clearly insufficient space for both cars to do so
What happened in the real world, on that lap and the previous one
If track doesn´t get narrower each lap, I think we can´t find a better example of an absurd decision based on politics as the argument used is just too ridiculous...
Verstappen wasnt as close to Leclerc on the run up to the second one so he had to brake later and ended up deeper into the corner (which is allowed).
Usually in that situation the car on the outside sees him coming, brakes early and cuts back across to have a better exit from the inside. That didnt happen because Verstappen came very late out of his slipstream and could only get his car alongside Leclercs which took away the opportunity for Leclerc to cut back across so he was stuck on the outside in a situation that was different than the lap before (which he realized too late I think).
Almost perfect evidence. Caught red/white strip handed. We could definitely say he deliberately drove Charles off because he had an action available, more lock, to avoid doing so. However, we need to see Charles road position to see if he was giving as much room as he did on lap 68. If he did, Max at fault, if he didn’t both at fault and maybe the Stewards are right.wesley123 wrote: ↑04 Jul 2019, 09:04That is great and all, but Max' steering input was much less on his second attempt.Alexf1 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 12:07What politics? There is a clear difference between the 2 attempts.Andres125sx wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 10:50Politics, the usual and aweful politics in F1...
What the stewads said:
What happened in the real world, on that lap and the previous one
If track doesn´t get narrower each lap, I think we can´t find a better example of an absurd decision based on politics as the argument used is just too ridiculous...
Verstappen wasnt as close to Leclerc on the run up to the second one so he had to brake later and ended up deeper into the corner (which is allowed).
Usually in that situation the car on the outside sees him coming, brakes early and cuts back across to have a better exit from the inside. That didnt happen because Verstappen came very late out of his slipstream and could only get his car alongside Leclercs which took away the opportunity for Leclerc to cut back across so he was stuck on the outside in a situation that was different than the lap before (which he realized too late I think).
https://i.imgur.com/xUbJkaf.png
Logically there would be more space if Max' gave more steering input, and he was clearly able to do so as seen on the lap before.
Which just confirms the same thing further.
I know the quote and who said it. I also think me meant "for me", seeing that he was one of the first drivers to use these kind of tactics (to quote another driver: "he let it be up to you if you had a crash or not")santos wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 15:19Quoting one of the greatest driver of F1: "All the time you have to leave a space".Jolle wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 15:00on L68 Leclerc was like: hey, this is my corner, move over. On L69: lets see how far I can open this door, please take the corner away from me.
Verstappen: Thanx!
now stop crying, Leclerc gave that corner to Verstappen how you give your teammate that corner after a pitwall call.
Leclerc was a long Verstappen. Lap 68 Verstappen leaved a space, the next one, he didn't and there was contact.
This will open the door for some crazy overtakes.
it was Fernando, not Senna, and he generally did give space and was very fair on track. Tho obviously he did say it meaning space for himself that timeJolle wrote: ↑04 Jul 2019, 13:35I know the quote and who said it. I also think me meant "for me", seeing that he was one of the first drivers to use these kind of tactics (to quote another driver: "he let it be up to you if you had a crash or not")santos wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 15:19Quoting one of the greatest driver of F1: "All the time you have to leave a space".Jolle wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 15:00on L68 Leclerc was like: hey, this is my corner, move over. On L69: lets see how far I can open this door, please take the corner away from me.
Verstappen: Thanx!
now stop crying, Leclerc gave that corner to Verstappen how you give your teammate that corner after a pitwall call.
Leclerc was a long Verstappen. Lap 68 Verstappen leaved a space, the next one, he didn't and there was contact.
This will open the door for some crazy overtakes.
oh yes, my bad. I heard the quote in my head and the accent sounded like Senna... But yes, Alonso was quite clean in that respect, as one of the very few.izzy wrote: ↑04 Jul 2019, 14:06it was Fernando, not Senna, and he generally did give space and was very fair on track. Tho obviously he did say it meaning space for himself that time
Austria T3 anyway you can't simply defend the inside it's tight and dirty, you'll lose to the undercut or just exit speed down to T4. Unless you run straight past the apex obviously, off the racing line, and see what the stewards will let you get away with
well yes if you take the inside you'll be slow out, so you have to do something to slow down the other guy who's on the outside. If you're just following the racing line on the exit you're allowed to keep doing that even if there's a car on the outside of you. They all know this so the guy on the outside gives it up or gets pushed off, unless he's actually aheadJolle wrote: ↑04 Jul 2019, 14:18oh yes, my bad. I heard the quote in my head and the accent sounded like Senna... But yes, Alonso was quite clean in that respect, as one of the very few.
But regarding covering the inside line, Leclerc did this on the lap before, and held the corner. On lap 89 he les all but defending that corner, going off track with two wheels on the opposite side. I also believe Verstappen made an extra point of not yielding, Leclerc will think twice the next time they go for the same corner.