strad wrote: ↑09 Sep 2019, 21:34
Lewis had no business trying to put his car there in the first place. But that obviously is just my opinion. Don't have much use for Palmer.
He has no business trying to get alongside and being alongside down a straight and not being run off the road? What?
Part of racing is even if you can't make a pass, putting the other driver in a bad position for a corner. LIke someone defends the inside, you don't just go okay, I give up back off and let the other driver have the corner. You stay on the outside, force the other driver to take a tighter turn and end up wider on exit.
Albon got alongside Sainz, Sainz was in a similar position to Hamilton, Albon being so tight had to take a wide exit, was very tight for the second corner and went very wide on exit. Conversely Sainz went in from wide, took a great line through turn 2, got a far superior exit and got by him after the chicane.
He got alongside fairly, he didn't dive bomb in around the outside and just appear there. Part of driving is simply putting the guy ahead of you in a bad position to take the next turn well.
The idea that he had no business being there, that if you can't make a pass then you should just leave the guy ahead completely alone, it's crazy.
Hamilton won Monza last year by having not passed Vettel, but being in a similar position on the outside, not being forced off track and Vettel taking the corner too fast and too tight on the inside. He spun largely because he clipped the inside curb WAY too hard which bumped him wider, made the rear end light, tapped Ham with his front tires and spun out. Like if Hamilton thought whoa, better leave them too it, he'd likely not have won the race.