Exactly, they applied that with both incidents. Which in Hamilton eyes didnt make sense when they used that with the vettel bottas crash.
No one said hamilton was right!seense wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 16:41
Exactly, they applied that with both incidents. Which in Hamilton eyes didnt make sense when they used that with the vettel bottas crash.
In Lewis' defense, he was likely politicking for Valtteri in the first one.seense wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 16:41
Exactly, they applied that with both incidents. Which in Hamilton eyes didnt make sense when they used that with the vettel bottas crash.
I don’t think Horner’s well liked, even the Brits think he’s full of itRestomaniac wrote: ↑18 Jul 2021, 17:31Christian Horner ‘NoBoDy PaSsEs At StOwE’.
Hamilton then passes as Stowe.
Exactly!
This is also my favorite tweet of all time, perhaps:
https://twitter.com/harrismonkey/status ... 88897?s=21
Okay. It's irrelevant if he was referring to his teammate.
The 2 incidences are hardly comparable though, one was literally 100% Vettels fault where as there is a compelling enough argument to say yesterdays incident was 60-40.dtro wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 16:52Okay. It's irrelevant if he was referring to his teammate.
Ultimately when someone, (Vettel), destroys your race through an error (damaging VB's car (damaging another driver's car is an error/mistake/miscalculation) and it's only kind of a tap on the hand really (five sec penalty I believe). He (Vettel) is just allowed to come back and still finish ahead of the person that they took out, it doesn't weigh up.
Ultimately when someone (Lewis) destroys your race through an error (taking out Max) and it's only kind-of a tap on the hand really (10 sec penalty). [He's] just allowed to come back and still finish ahead of the person that they took out, it doesn't weigh up.
Apples and oranges. Yes. Right. Of course.
Yep nailed it. And clearly by the interviews given by HAM afterwards, there wasn’t a mistake. He absolutely intently chose to keep the line that he followed. I don’t get the mistake part people keep drumming up. He hasn’t said any such thing. He just wasn’t going to go further towards the apex. He’s made it abundantly clearringo wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 15:57People are saying this narrativd that Lewis made a "mistake" again. Lewis did not make any mistakes. He knew exactly where he eas placing his car to make that corner. The car would have been around that corner safely and at a lower speed than normal. In fact i dont think there was any significant understeer either. Lewis intent was simply to occupy the space while turning to keep Max off the apex forcing him to take a wider line. It was not a wreckless dive bomb into a closing gap.mwillems wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 15:32I completely agree with Karun here, and having seen this piece of footage now, you can see just how aggressive Max was, he saw Lewis, backed out, changed his mind sand decided to squeeze his loaded front wing in a 300kph corner. What a stupid thing to do for himself. When a front his a rear, it's the rear hit car that usually loses out *Unless your name is Vettel and you drive a Ferrari). He had several more corners to take control.
Max is more at fault for playing a game he had no business playing with his pointd advantage. And turn in hard like a mad man, knoeing full well LH44 was occupying the inside of the track.
I am glad it is over and think the discussion should shift. I always maintained that Lewis has mind games in his arsenal. He will continue to present Max with tough decisions to make.. go for it or back out.
When Lewis takes back the lead of the championship he will go back to being conservative and protecting his points.
This is just something Max has never experienced. He will do well to learn game theory.
Again I agree! What I dont agree with is you included the fact that both incidents are different. They are different, but it's not much of importance in the "imposed punishment vs outcome" discussion.
Same thing imho. You can replace the names and I’d have the same opinion. Like Masi said, judge the merits of the case. But fwiw I find what the actual driver says about it far more telling about how the coming together happened then us arm chair experts opining and forming an opinion based on our own bias.langedweil wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 17:01I truly wonder how discussion would have been if things happened the other way around.
In both cases it was luck and circumstance that the driver that was given a penalty finished ahead.dtro wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 16:52Okay. It's irrelevant if he was referring to his teammate.
Ultimately when someone, (Vettel), destroys your race through an error (damaging VB's car (damaging another driver's car is an error/mistake/miscalculation) and it's only kind of a tap on the hand really (five sec penalty I believe). He (Vettel) is just allowed to come back and still finish ahead of the person that they took out, it doesn't weigh up.
Ultimately when someone (Lewis) destroys your race through an error (taking out Max) and it's only kind-of a tap on the hand really (10 sec penalty). [He's] just allowed to come back and still finish ahead of the person that they took out, it doesn't weigh up.
Apples and oranges. Yes. Right. Of course.
During the stoppage, Mercedes inspected Hamilton's car to assess the damage from the incident with Verstappen, which was when an issue with his left-front wheel rim was spotted, and the parts were duly replaced.
Given Hamilton's team was unable to detect the potential problem while the driver was on the track, Mercedes trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin believes had the race not been stopped the damage would have resulted in a car retirement.
"We'd failed the rim where we had the contact at the front left, so that would've been a DNF had it not been red-flagged," Shovlin said after the British GP.
PZ wouldn't have come back!langedweil wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 17:01I truly wonder how discussion would have been if things happened the other way around.
Obviously exactly the same but with roles and attitudes reversed amongst Verstappen, Hamilton, Horner, Marko and Wolff, and several of the less objective posters on here.langedweil wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 17:01I truly wonder how discussion would have been if things happened the other way around.
Don't want to make an ass of myself assuming who you attribute the majority of the fault yesterday. Hear all the time late apex is a safe apex, and what Ham took yesterday was an early apex, in my opinion. He was never going to make that corner cleanly. But regardless.Starkblood80 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 16:57The 2 incidences are hardly comparable though, one was literally 100% Vettels fault where as there is a compelling enough argument to say yesterdays incident was 60-40.dtro wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 16:52Okay. It's irrelevant if he was referring to his teammate.
Ultimately when someone, (Vettel), destroys your race through an error (damaging VB's car (damaging another driver's car is an error/mistake/miscalculation) and it's only kind of a tap on the hand really (five sec penalty I believe). He (Vettel) is just allowed to come back and still finish ahead of the person that they took out, it doesn't weigh up.
Ultimately when someone (Lewis) destroys your race through an error (taking out Max) and it's only kind-of a tap on the hand really (10 sec penalty). [He's] just allowed to come back and still finish ahead of the person that they took out, it doesn't weigh up.
Apples and oranges. Yes. Right. Of course.