No, the late braking ensured him a fast exit. He did not expect that Leclerc would stay on the outside parallel to him, like almost all drivers do, they back down. Leclerc did not.NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 08:45So the late braking put him on a trajectory that meant he had to drive in to the side of Charles?
He went exactly where he expected, and Leclerc also should have expected him there (and probably did).So now your saying Max had no control on where he would be at corner exit?
Not the overall best line, but the best line from his position.By braking on the inside, you are never going to be on the the best racing line. NEVER.
No he was not. Leclerc was too wide for the better line.Charles had the better racing line going in to the corner, not Max. If we go by your rules, Max should have got out the way at the inside apex, as Charles was on the racing line.
No, normally drivers back down in these situations and they still will. That Leclerc stayed there is the rarity in this incident, not the norm.
These are completely wrong!DutchDopey wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 09:11
No, the late braking ensured him a fast exit.
&
No he was not. Leclerc was too wide for the better line.
Guess that FIA have to make a new rule: "When Max Versappen is trying to overtake you, must back down".DutchDopey wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 09:14No, normally drivers back down in these situations and they still will. That Leclerc stayed there is the rarity in this incident, not the norm.
Sieper wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 10:28What About Vettel pushing Max of track in China 2019 (after the chicane). I haven't heared you about that. Apparently one always has to leave a cars width or else (danger, bad driving, just wish Vettel did that fair etc. etc.). In that case Verstappen was even forced on the grass (where it is easy for a car to spin). Verstappen didn't complain either (just like you, so on that occasion you and him both had the same thought pattern).
And if an outside line that is quicker grants you the right to stay there, why did you not complain in 2018 when Max was on the outside line in again China versus Lewis and was pushed off the track. Max was on that outside quick line and the wider the entry to a corner means you can carry faster corner speed, so the wider the entry the better. Max was wider than Lewis, so Verstappen had the better line in (apparently).
Wow, look what you have discovered.DutchDopey wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 09:14No, normally drivers back down in these situations and they still will. That Leclerc stayed there is the rarity in this incident, not the norm.
You can compare it on the video. Corner 2 has a more than 90 degree angle, by braking earlier and making a tighter turn Max had a slower exit speed in the first try.NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 09:32These are completely wrong!DutchDopey wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 09:11No, the late braking ensured him a fast exit.
&
No he was not. Leclerc was too wide for the better line.
the first part, late braking and a compromised line inside are the 2 things that almost guarantee a SLOW exit. not a fast exit.
That all depends on the corner, going wide does means you can go faster through the corner but your exit speed is compromised because you must accelerate later. A tighter turn means a slower corner speed, but you can accelerate earlier.the second part, the wider the entry to a corner means you can carry faster corner speed, so the wider the entry the better. Leclerc was wider than Max, so Leclerc had the better line in.
Every divebomb takeover as I showed earlier in this thread happens this way. And what Max did was not even a divebomb.santos wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 11:14Guess that FIA have to make a new rule: "When Max Versappen is trying to overtake you, must back down".DutchDopey wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 09:14No, normally drivers back down in these situations and they still will. That Leclerc stayed there is the rarity in this incident, not the norm.
They all push each other off on the outside on corner exits, and they're allowed to, as long as they're following the racing line. You know this really as they do it every single race The question with Max this time was just whether he was following the line or not. Because this:Sieper wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 10:28What About Vettel pushing Max of track in China 2019 (after the chicane). I haven't heared you about that. Apparently one always has to leave a cars width or else (danger, bad driving, just wish Vettel did that fair etc. etc.). In that case Verstappen was even forced on the grass (where it is easy for a car to spin). Verstappen didn't complain either (just like you, so on that occasion you and him both had the same thought pattern).
And if an outside line that is quicker grants you the right to stay there, why did you not complain in 2018 when Max was on the outside line in again China versus Lewis and was pushed off the track. Max was on that outside quick line and the wider the entry to a corner means you can carry faster corner speed, so the wider the entry the better. Max was wider than Lewis, so Verstappen had the better line in (apparently).
First part, Turning tighter does indeed mean you will be slower, as was evident on lap 68. So to be able to gain a position, Max had to force another car off the track, and you say its ok to do that.DutchDopey wrote: ↑09 Jul 2019, 11:54
You can compare it on the video. Corner 2 has a more than 90 degree angle, by braking earlier and making a tighter turn Max had a slower exit speed in the first try.
That all depends on the corner, going wide does means you can go faster through the corner but your exit speed is compromised because you must accelerate later. A tighter turn means a slower corner speed, but you can accelerate earlier.
Yes it was a fabulous drive, just slightly spoiled by this, for me. Not ruined, but it took the shine off it. it's not about whether other drivers have pushed other drivers off, it's whether this represents as much skill as a clean pass