There's precedence for the car on the inside having a certain "right" to the corner and his racing line, however unfair that may seem to you. Leclerc conceded that line himself when he chose to stay on the outside and invite Max to go there. If he hadn't wanted that, he should have driven defensively by going there and covering it before Max stuck his nose there.Andres125sx wrote: ↑07 Jul 2019, 17:20Sorry but that´s not fair. With two cars in parallel, none can go from edge to edge. I really am struggling to understand how someone with track experience as yourself can continue ignoring such a basic rule to justify Max
My post was to explain why that is and why following a car parallel but on the outside is a risky and vulnerable position to be in. As per the rules, deliberate crowding is not allowed. If you simply understeer or by the trajectory you committed yourself to leads towards the outside, it's not deliberate. Proving if Max had margin and could have avoided going that far out to the edge of the track on corner exit is difficult, but under the premise 'innocent until proven guilty', I don't see deliberate crowding there. And it doesn't negate that, again, Leclerc put himself into that vulnerable position.
We can go on and on in circles here, but it really doesn't change the fact that Leclerc could have simply defended better to cover off that eventuality.