gshevlin wrote: ↑28 Nov 2019, 17:44
I am astonished at some of the comments in this thread.
In any sporting competition, competitors will assess what they have to do in order to win, be that fitness, preparation, or how far to push the envelope, both in terms of the written rules, and the unwritten rules. They will watch how other competitors, and people at the top of the sport, are treated when they try to push the envelope in competition.
It is my firm opinion that Michael Schumacher's on-track racing decisions when fighting competitors would have been influenced by looking at how the FIA regarded prior racing incidents. He would have seen the results of Ayrton Senna's ramming of Alain Prost off the track in 1990, where Senna was not penalized any championship points and therefore became F1 champion (although he was forced to apologize later to avoid a suspension for part of the 1991 season).
The 1990 incident, and the failure of the FIA to correctly punish Ayrton Senna, told all competitors that if you could construct a vaguely plausible reason for it (based on a tit-for-tat payback for perceived past sins), or make it look like what is termed a "racing accident", ramming into a competitor had more upside than downside, especially if it would assure you of a championship.
As a result, Michael Schumacher did that twice in order to try and settle championships. He did it in 1994 to Damon Hill, and emerged from the incident with his first world championship. He tried it again in 1997 against Jacques Villeneuve, but lost out and retired on the spot with a damaged car, which led to Villeneuve becoming champion.
Suspensions are the only action that will modify the behavior of competitors. At the end of the day, racing drivers and other highly driven competitive sports people only live to compete, so the only punishment that will really hit home is being denied the opportunity to compete. For a professional athlete being paid more than $10m a year, even a fine of $1m will simply be seen as a cost of doing business. Especially when it is netted off against the financial rewards of winning a championship.
Ditto reprimands and probation. Fines, reprimands and probationary periods are the sport saying in coded language "naughty naughty, better not be so blatant about this in future, but we like controversy from time to time (hint hint)".
You can tell how serious a sport is about eliminating bad behavior by competitors by how it treats violation of rules by those competitors. F1's past actions have tended to show that they value controversy over adherence to written and unwritten rules.