This, is correct far to many people seem to glaze over the nuances.NathanOlder wrote: ↑08 Jan 2021, 17:50How is it a myth? Russia example was because Lewis was fighting for the championship against Seb, Bottas was well out of it. Bottas had equal opportunity to be in the championship fight and for one reason or another he fell out of it.grubschumi13 wrote: ↑08 Jan 2021, 16:34Lot's of people deny it. It is a myth that Hamilton's team mates always have equal treatment and it is a drum they beat in every debate when numerous occasions can be shown this is not true.raymondu999 wrote: ↑08 Jan 2021, 00:06I don’t think anyone denies Bottas is a wingman no? It’s just the smart thing to do. I think Merc have been a bit more gracious about it than Ferrari were with Rubens though — they don’t seem to use those team orders unless in a tight fight/title fight
Singapore was Merc trying everything to get a chance to win. If Lewis came out in front of Albon, then he could use all his fresh rubber to attack cars ahead. Is that not simple to understand?
Germany they let Bottas attack for a bit, then decided to call it off to make sure there were no accidents. There was less than 10 laps to go, and Bottas was nearly 70 points behind Vettel in the standings where as Lewis was 8pts behind Seb. Thats just common sense. Bottas still had equal opportunities.
Lewis let Valterri back through in Hungary to keep it fair,
Hamilton pushed Leclerc hard in Monza 19 to the point it wrecked his tyres, then they let Bottas have a go with his better tyres. Both Merc drivers are given equal opportunity until the team needs to start prioritising. Not like Ferrari as an example who came out and stated who was number 1 in 2019 even before the season began.
If you have 2 cars running 1-2 and the 3rd place car is faster, its not making the car in 2nd place a number 2 just because you ask your 2nd place car to hold up the 3rd place car. Its the team, in a team sport trying to maximise their results.
Switching 1-2 round near the end of a race early in the season, or near the end of the season with both cars in the running for the championship is not having equal treatment.
Bottas gets equal treatment at Mercedes. When did Lewis get upgrades that Lewis didn't? Its. even at the point at Merc where the drivers have to run the same tyre strategies to keep it eqaul.
In a race if one driver has a significantly better chance at winning the race, the team will favor them for that race. The only exception would be if the slower of the two drivers is significantly farther ahead in the WDC.
From this simple concept that pretty much ever team follows, we get all the previously referenced issues and many more.