People tend to take things out of context. I say reading comprehension is an important skill.
Anyway. See y'all in the next celebration.
Welcome back.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 18:33People tend to take things out of context. I say reading comprehension is an important skill.
Anyway. See y'all in the next celebration.
What translation?
I think he is referring to If you have an android phone you can use the camera 'lens' mode to translate it.
I think Hamilton's emotions got the better of him and lost himself there for a moment, instead of taking the "loss" and lift for a moment... As a competitive person myself I can totally imagine it. As a Max fan I can let that part go actually, but I'm galled because of his arrogance and outrage celebration. He f*cked up in the heat of the moment, but doesn't show any remorse and refuses to apologize.Fulcrum wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 19:37Driver61: "In my opinion, this was 100% Lewis Hamilton's fault."
As for the incident itself, probably still a racing incident in my book, with more blame attributable to Hamilton.
The issue here is really the brinkmanship both drivers are beginning to engage in.
My suspicion is, Hamilton did the calculus and realized the potential outcomes of contact in that corner largely favoured him, rolled the dice, and was proved correct. Further, he appears relatively remorseless.
As PZ has said already, Hamilton is an expert at driving in the 'grey zone'; not being dirty as such, but walking the line between hard and illegal driving. Moreover, he is obviously competitive, so the gloves are off in that regard.
Verstappen... Well he's already declared himself with THAT tweet, and what with the environment of Marko and Horner, I cannot imagine he will be able to rise above the histrionics, or de-escalate the tension, which is a shame because I think he could walk away with this title if he simply remained calm and rational, rather than resorting to petulance.
Overall, I suspect race threads are going to get locked more often this year. I just hope no-one gets hurt, whatever happens.
i will never understand the line of thought which suggest that Hamilton must have shown remorse ? for what exactly ? standing his ground ? and apologize for what again ? how many times has Verstappen apologized for bomb diving or crashing into other drivers ? why is it that it must be Hamilton that have to yield even when he shouldn't because MAx does not care if he caused a collision or not ?ArcticWolfie wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 19:49I think Hamilton's emotions got the better of him and lost himself there for a moment, instead of taking the "loss" and lift for a moment... As a competitive person myself I can totally imagine it. As a Max fan I can let that part go actually, but I'm galled because of his arrogance and outrage celebration. He f*cked up in the heat of the moment, but doesn't show any remorse and refuses to apologize.Fulcrum wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 19:37Driver61: "In my opinion, this was 100% Lewis Hamilton's fault."
As for the incident itself, probably still a racing incident in my book, with more blame attributable to Hamilton.
The issue here is really the brinkmanship both drivers are beginning to engage in.
My suspicion is, Hamilton did the calculus and realized the potential outcomes of contact in that corner largely favoured him, rolled the dice, and was proved correct. Further, he appears relatively remorseless.
As PZ has said already, Hamilton is an expert at driving in the 'grey zone'; not being dirty as such, but walking the line between hard and illegal driving. Moreover, he is obviously competitive, so the gloves are off in that regard.
Verstappen... Well he's already declared himself with THAT tweet, and what with the environment of Marko and Horner, I cannot imagine he will be able to rise above the histrionics, or de-escalate the tension, which is a shame because I think he could walk away with this title if he simply remained calm and rational, rather than resorting to petulance.
Overall, I suspect race threads are going to get locked more often this year. I just hope no-one gets hurt, whatever happens.
And maybe even worse; he probably triggered an engine penalty later in the season because while Honda says the engine "may" be salvageable, it will be a huge gamble. The reliability may be damaged by the crash and cause a failure later on. Gambling on reliability issues or take a penalty for a new engine?... not an easy choice. (this is without taking the cost cap in consideration).
This race may have decided the championship already.
Yeah, your statement says it all... It gives you a free pass to "accidently" touch your opponent without (barely any) consequences.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 19:53I don’t buy the being offended at the celebration part.
Especially how we celebrate quotes from Grand Prix, and romanticize greats of the past for being ruthless in their pursuit of victory, and applaud Max for having many of the same attributes.
How many times have we heard Max compared to a young Senna?
Lewis won at his home track, in front of the first full grand stands since 2019… he’s going to be amped.
It’s not an either or thing and it’s just a “no offense, but” type of statement.
Max went to the hospital for precautionary reasons, because Silverstone doesn’t have a CT scanner like other tracks. 51g’s is a hard impact for sure, but NASCAR and Indy Car routinely have those. It’s not unheard of or especially rare. He walked away under his own power and that’s what was relayed to Lewis when Lewis asked.
No amount of Horner / Marko spin changes those facts.
Max’s car being wrecked isn’t Lewis problem. Much as it would be the same if roles were reversed.
In my opinion this is nonsense for two reasons.RZS10 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 19:30No, i just wasn't aware that it would get embedded, when you go to FB there should be an automatic translation to whichever language FB is set to.
Here's the translation of the post:
https://i.imgur.com/cSXKgBh.png
Translated image:
https://i.imgur.com/PuX1iGt.png