Maybe it isnt as much luck, but experience and maturity of choosing which battles to fight and which to concede to fight another corner/stint/race?
Maybe it isnt as much luck, but experience and maturity of choosing which battles to fight and which to concede to fight another corner/stint/race?
You’ve worded it far better then I have in previous posts.Dee wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:19Hamilton himself in two quotes during the post press conference and take note of the order and thought process in quote 1; https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... nYFtQ.html
"I was pretty far up alongside him (Max) 1. but I then could see he wasn't going to back-out and 2. we went into the corner and 3. then we collided"
Then talking about the same move on Leclerc who he was also alongside and saying "At one point I backed out, just to make sure we didn't come together"
This wasn't a both of them were expecting the other to concede incident, this was Lewis fully knowing that Max wouldn't back off and still keeping his line. After the touch, he still ran wide on that corner, meaning that he was always ending up in Max's car, his trajectary was never one that was making that corner cleanly
There is a difference between expecting the other driver to back down and knowing he won't and still keeping your line
And now he has an extra 25 points, a win, millions of dollars worth of damage done to RB in a cost cap year, most likely penalties incoming for Max having to take an extra engine and gearbox and a rival who has had to be hospitalised after a 51G crash
It also puts his reactions after the race completely into context. Because Lewis knew there would be a crash, he wasn't guilty about it happening. He expected the crash, didn't feel bad that Max then crashed out, could celebrate his win fully. Never gave Max any care or consideration in his interview after the race or in any further interviews up until the point he was told he was in the hospital. Then he says, of course you never want things like this to happen....
How can you say, you never want things like this to happen after not changing your line when you knew there would be a crash otherwise?
People may be outraged at me saying this stuff but I am literally using Lewis's own words, so I may not be the person you want to be mad at
If you want to constructively discuss where I am wrong here, please do because I am soley basing this of what Hamilton has said and how he acted after the race
TDLR: Lewis intentionally crashed with Max to send a message that he wouldn't be pushed around any more
The line he took (aggressive swith to right) and the speed he carried to get there, there was no way he would have made that corner clean. Even if Max would have given room, he would have massively understeered to hit him invariably. He wanted to do or die.Dee wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:19Hamilton himself in two quotes during the post press conference and take note of the order and thought process in quote 1; https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... nYFtQ.html
"I was pretty far up alongside him (Max) 1. but I then could see he wasn't going to back-out and 2. we went into the corner and 3. then we collided"
Then talking about the same move on Leclerc who he was also alongside and saying "At one point I backed out, just to make sure we didn't come together"
This wasn't a both of them were expecting the other to concede incident, this was Lewis fully knowing that Max wouldn't back off and still keeping his line. After the touch, he still ran wide on that corner, meaning that he was always ending up in Max's car, his trajectary was never one that was making that corner cleanly
There is a difference between expecting the other driver to back down and knowing he won't and still keeping your line
And now he has an extra 25 points, a win, millions of dollars worth of damage done to RB in a cost cap year, most likely penalties incoming for Max having to take an extra engine and gearbox and a rival who has had to be hospitalised after a 51G crash
It also puts his reactions after the race completely into context. Because Lewis knew there would be a crash, he wasn't guilty about it happening. He expected the crash, didn't feel bad that Max then crashed out, could celebrate his win fully. Never gave Max any care or consideration in his interview after the race or in any further interviews up until the point he was told he was in the hospital. Then he says, of course you never want things like this to happen....
How can you say, you never want things like this to happen after not changing your line when you knew there would be a crash otherwise?
People may be outraged at me saying this stuff but I am literally using Lewis's own words, so I may not be the person you want to be mad at
If you want to constructively discuss where I am wrong here, please do because I am soley basing this of what Hamilton has said and how he acted after the race
TDLR: Lewis intentionally crashed with Max to send a message that he wouldn't be pushed around any more
Hmmm....still Ricciardo commented on the point of understeer to be caused by dirty air. I mean the result is the same, but I do not think it was deliberate. More like a Vettel-like moment for Ham.Ryar wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:34The line he took (aggressive swith to right) and the speed he carried to get there, there was no way he would have made that corner clean. Even if Max would have given room, he would have massively understeered to hit him invariably. He wanted to do or die.Dee wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:19Hamilton himself in two quotes during the post press conference and take note of the order and thought process in quote 1; https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... nYFtQ.html
"I was pretty far up alongside him (Max) 1. but I then could see he wasn't going to back-out and 2. we went into the corner and 3. then we collided"
Then talking about the same move on Leclerc who he was also alongside and saying "At one point I backed out, just to make sure we didn't come together"
This wasn't a both of them were expecting the other to concede incident, this was Lewis fully knowing that Max wouldn't back off and still keeping his line. After the touch, he still ran wide on that corner, meaning that he was always ending up in Max's car, his trajectary was never one that was making that corner cleanly
There is a difference between expecting the other driver to back down and knowing he won't and still keeping your line
And now he has an extra 25 points, a win, millions of dollars worth of damage done to RB in a cost cap year, most likely penalties incoming for Max having to take an extra engine and gearbox and a rival who has had to be hospitalised after a 51G crash
It also puts his reactions after the race completely into context. Because Lewis knew there would be a crash, he wasn't guilty about it happening. He expected the crash, didn't feel bad that Max then crashed out, could celebrate his win fully. Never gave Max any care or consideration in his interview after the race or in any further interviews up until the point he was told he was in the hospital. Then he says, of course you never want things like this to happen....
How can you say, you never want things like this to happen after not changing your line when you knew there would be a crash otherwise?
People may be outraged at me saying this stuff but I am literally using Lewis's own words, so I may not be the person you want to be mad at
If you want to constructively discuss where I am wrong here, please do because I am soley basing this of what Hamilton has said and how he acted after the race
TDLR: Lewis intentionally crashed with Max to send a message that he wouldn't be pushed around any more
Lewis broke first because he was on the tighter line, but he can only do so much. He can't just spike the brake pedal, he'd lock up and spear into max, and that could of been a much worse accident. After a certain point, the only thing a driver can do is hope it works out, as something's going to happen no matter what.
If the stewards thought there was even a hint of this, he would have been disqualified. The fact that he got the second most lientney penalty suggest they didn't!
See, I could absolutely understand and agree with you if it wasn't for his comments and actions with Leclerc. Lewis broke first because he was on the tighter line in that instance as well, but he backed out to avoid contact...dans79 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:41Lewis broke first because he was on the tighter line, but he can only do so much. He can't just spike the brake pedal, he'd lock up and spear into max, and that could of been a much worse accident. After a certain point, the only thing a driver can do is hope it works out, as something's going to happen no matter what.
If the stewards thought there was even a hint of this, he would have been disqualified. The fact that he got the second most lientney penalty suggest they didn't!
Agreed, this thread is just tit for tat that's going around in circles now. The race is over, the penalty was served, the final race classification has been published. If there's a case for an appeal, Red Bull are within their rights to take it further. They haven't indicated they are planning to do that, so it appears the case is closed.Big Tea wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:41I have to say I don't like the way F1 is going. It is so hyped up in the media that fans or even casual watchers can not just accept an incident an let it go.
You go to a boxing match and watch two guys thump each other and discuss it in a friendly manner after, or a rugby game where players are routinely mashed, but get back into it and have a beer with the opposing fans.
I really hope that it does not go as cricket began to at one time and take on football tribalism 100% for or 100% against no middle ground not ended when the whistle blows.*
* This with apologies to the majority of football fans who are fine, but the minority get the publicity.
The issue is we have no time based reference of when he made the Leclerc decisions. As i said, after a certain point, it's just going to happen and there is nothing either driver can do about it.Dee wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:50See, I could absolutely understand and agree with you if it wasn't for his comments and actions with Leclerc. Lewis broke first because he was on the tighter line in that instance as well, but he backed out to avoid contact...dans79 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:41Lewis broke first because he was on the tighter line, but he can only do so much. He can't just spike the brake pedal, he'd lock up and spear into max, and that could of been a much worse accident. After a certain point, the only thing a driver can do is hope it works out, as something's going to happen no matter what.
If the stewards thought there was even a hint of this, he would have been disqualified. The fact that he got the second most lientney penalty suggest they didn't!
"I was pretty far up alongside him (Max) 1. but I then could see he wasn't going to back-out and 2. we went into the corner and 3. then we collided"
Then talking about the same move on Leclerc who he was also alongside and saying "At one point I backed out, just to make sure we didn't come together"
In addition, Lewis's immediate reaction in the car was relatively calm. He seemed to be unsurprised by the collision and unfazed by it.Dee wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:19This wasn't a both of them were expecting the other to concede incident, this was Lewis fully knowing that Max wouldn't back off and still keeping his line. After the touch, he still ran wide on that corner, meaning that he was always ending up in Max's car, his trajectary was never one that was making that corner cleanly
...
It also puts his reactions after the race completely into context. Because Lewis knew there would be a crash, he wasn't guilty about it happening. He expected the crash, didn't feel bad that Max then crashed out, could celebrate his win fully. Never gave Max any care or consideration in his interview after the race or in any further interviews up until the point he was told he was in the hospital. Then he says, of course you never want things like this to happen....
Imo, its because far to many of the younger fans have never participated in sports of any type. Participation in sports has been trending down significantly over the last 2 and a half decades or so. To many kids play nothing but video games now, and thus don't have a proper grasp on reality, sportsmanship, or what it's like to make split second decisions with major consequences.Big Tea wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:41I have to say I don't like the way F1 is going. It is so hyped up in the media that fans or even casual watchers can not just accept an incident an let it go.
You go to a boxing match and watch two guys thump each other and discuss it in a friendly manner after, or a rugby game where players are routinely mashed, but get back into it and have a beer with the opposing fans.
I really hope that it does not go as cricket began to at one time and take on football tribalism 100% for or 100% against no middle ground not ended when the whistle blows.*
* This with apologies to the majority of football fans who are fine, but the minority get the publicity.