notsofast wrote: ↑03 Sep 2019, 10:59
From lap 2 onward, whenever there is a gap somewhere, there is usually just one driver who is near enough to be able to go for that gap. On lap 1, there are often multiple drivers who are in close proximity to a gap. When they all go for the gap, you end up with the usual lap 1 racing incident. Especially in turn 1. There is so much going on on lap 1 that you cannot know where all the other drivers are and what they are doing. However, if you see a gap, you can be fairly confident that there are others who see the same gap. That goes for both Kimi and Max.
Which is exactly why when a driver is very wide, he should assume there could be cars he can't see on the inside and should stay on a wider line and not chop to the inside. Likewise a driver on the inside should not suddenly swing out to a wide line even if it's a corner where a wider line would provide a better exit.
See Germany and the Haas's making contact for this. AT the hairpin if Magnussen was on his own then if he ends up tighter he wants to swing out wide but he knew Grosjean was there so he stayed tight on the inside. Conversely Grosjean knew Mag was there but cut stupidly tight and they wheel banged.
This is precisely why I'm irked by everyone's view. AT the start Kimi can't know there is someone on the inside but he goes straight to the apex. This is fundamentally wrong in racing, it's fundamentally dangerous. He knew his position, he knew where the racing point was. The racing point gave up a fundamentally better line, he was partially alongside and inside him so he had a right to the corner over him... why did he give it up? Because there was a car alongside him on the inside line and he realised there was the outside car that might do something silly and an inside car that he didn't have better position on so he gave it up. Kimi thinks the guy with 2 cars widths on his inside is the only car there and when he backs out bang the apex is free.
Again it's super simple, in races where people are out wide and they assume there is someone on the inside, they take a wider line leave space and don't get in an accident. In races where someone is wide and cuts to apex or is inside and swings out wide... we have crashes.
For me it's on every car to unless they can physically see the other lines are clear, to leave space and Kimi is the one who didn't do that.
As for the arguments of where Max was before the braking zone it's all rather irrelevant, where Max is when Kimi turns in is more relevant because if you can't make a late braking move into bagloads of space without being given space on the inside of the turn... you completely and utterly brake racing as a whole. People out braking on the inside is a staple of motorsport everywhere.
Everyone seems to be suggesting that if this was lap 30 then Kimi would know Max was around and making a move so he'd give space but at the start he doesn't know he's there so... it's fine to make a dangerous move? If you don't know, leave space, the idea that because it's the start, and because he doesn't know he's there it becomes okay to make a dangerous chop is madness.