A. There is no such thing as "spirit of the rules". There are the rules and actions are either in accordance with them or they are not. Hamilton's actions were in accordance with the rule as it was written. That's it.jz11 wrote: ↑28 Sep 2020, 11:19
what Lewis and his RE did IMO goes against the spirit of that rule, hence stewards acting on it
and it is never easy to write rules when the people you're writing them for very actively will try to exploit every last bit of gray area the wording provides, a sentence would turn into couple pages long essay if you tried to include every little detail, and even then it wouldn't be enough
maybe the stewards don't have the athority, means or time to place signs or paint lines on the track to define practice start area in Sochi when there are no other suitable markers there on the track, but the idea of the rule is clear to me, and as I said previously - it is a simple case of going over to them to clarify such things, Hamiltons supporting people thought otherwise and got punished for that
I don't think there is anything more I can add to this, see you all at the next one
B. The stewards / race director are fully entitled to require changes to be made to a track. It happens all the time with various corners having kerbs added or removed, bollards placed or removed etc.
C. Writing a rule for this situation is absolutely the simplest thing to do:
This is entirely unambiguous. It designates a start location and an end location for starts to be practised. It does not need pages of words.Practice starts must only be carried out in the area designated for them. The area designated for practice starts is between the marker boards stating "practice start area". No practice starts may be undertaken anywhere before the first board or after the second board. Cars carrying out practice starts must be positioned to right hand side of the lane so that another car can freely pass to the left without having to cross the white line.
The simple reality is that the race director messed up. He then compounded that by flagging a situation to the stewards who then issued an erroneous penalty based on his guidance. This is a race director who is known for wanting to improve "the show". Having Hamilton penalised during the race was an attempt to spice up the race - known for being hugely boring unless there is a crash.