DChemTech wrote: ↑22 Jul 2019, 18:38Sorry, but it annoys me intensely when someone writes "Hass". The team is named Haas and has been named that for several seasons. No reason to get that wrong.diffuser wrote: ↑22 Jul 2019, 18:24Sieper wrote: ↑21 Jul 2019, 21:17
That was a decided pass, which left every opportunity to yield. Which Leclerc didn’t do, banking on a penalty I am sure. Did you see Leclerc slamming to the right on the end of hangar straight last race? That left no opportunity for Max to decide to abort the overtake attempt. If you disagree with Max way of driving, even singling him out I am curious as to how you see such attempts?
I always subscribed to the Alonso approach "you always jhabe to leabe space!". It also makes sense if you're in a title fight, as the more often you have contact, the higher the chances of a retirement. When Max finally did get passed, LeClerc didn't have any space and was forced off the road. The reason why max did that was, the Ferrari was faster in a straight line, and LeClerc re-passed him on the previous pass attempt. That's only my opinion, that plus 4 quarters will give you 1 $.
By not penalizing Max, it led to the hanger straight sequence. If you notice LeClerc didn't behave the same with other drivers, just with max. In the end if other drivers adopt LeClerc lead of treating Max differently, I believe it will lead to Max having having more incidents than other drivers, hence more retirements. Another driver that has Max's attitude is Hass's Magnussen. Like to see those two in similar paced cars and see the tears that will follow.
As for the overtake, one should be able to take such a decided overtake if one is ahead (which Max was). If you always must leave a cars width of space on the outside as long as even a fraction of the defender is alongside, it means there is hardly any point taking the inside line. You always need to take the corner extra-tight, miss the apex and ruin your exit speed - such that the defender always has the advantage coming out of the corner. For the defender there's no point in yielding: either the attacker leaves space (you win by exit speed), or you run off track (no serious consequence with run-off areas) and the attacker gets penalized. The only inside overtakes that will be successful in that case are the ones with huge speed differences - but for near equal rivals, forget it. I can see how it seems like a harsh move by Max to make, and that it is annoying when it happens to the driver you support, but I do think it is how racing should be allowed to take place. There's very little left otherwise.
Little dyslexic. Sorry.
For me the opposite, is true. The only time real passing gets done is if you leave space. As for inside moves, why would anyone block anything but the inside, force you to the outside and then just drive you off the road as LeClrec did to Max @ SilverStone? Clearly they allowed that.