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Nice comment and truthful one. 100% agree with it. I also afraid of RB building next Vettel. Till you are in comfort zone, you will never learn from mistake.foxmulder_ms wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 02:57horner et al cannot take hard racing :d lol.. it was not even hard racing actually. it was utter dangerous driving on max's part. you cannot view anything in vacuum. as I wrote before, max defended by going outside the track on 1st corner then he swerve like crazy constantly, he pushed Hamilton to the wall which incidentally made Lewis to take a more acute angle to copse. Lewis was perfectly side by side going into corner and had every right for the passing move but on top of all these max tuned into him expecting lewis to back off. yeah.. right.. max will not learn because this is what redbull feeds on. media hype... on so called greatness.. we see where their previous "great" is now. No offense to seb, I actually like him but redbull is just a media machine they are not racers as proved by saying "that corner is not where passing happens brooaoaoghh ". get real.
Also they literally forgave team points to get 1-point away from Lewis.. How low is that!!@! So from now on dear redbull fans, you cannot say a single word about Bottas being a wing man.
So for Hamilton he is the green car on the image on the left. He has a right to the corner if he can do it cleanly.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:
Your miscomprehend what the Image is saying. Look at the keywords.
It was possible because no had commited to the corner yet. See Leclerc.
I don't recall you fighting this rule when Russell wiped out Bottas in Imola. I must have missed that. What was the reaction from the Williams fans back then ?Ryar wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 05:34Absolutely. Implementing cost cap is also a process of learnings these undesired impacts on the proceedings. Today it's Red Bull and tomorrow it will be Mercedes, again. So it's critical for FIA to have the cost cap regulations updated. The spirit of budget cap is to stop overspend on development, it shouldn't hamper racing operations just because someone made a dumb move from the other team.fritticaldi wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 02:53Mercedes should pay for the repairs of the Red Bull car since its driver Hamilton was deemed responsible by Michael Masi and the stewards at Race Control. . F1 is on a budget cap and Dr. Helmut Markko is correct in complaining about the costs of fixing the car. Red Bull should not be penalized financially for the accident caused by Hamilton. This is something the FIA should look into and probably implement a system in the near future . Anybody else agree ?
Lewis is turning in towards the apex and is heading towards the inside line of the corner when Max comes across and hits him. Max decided to keep turning in and assumed that the other driver would yield because he is Max.Lock2nl wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 00:20So that's a deciding moment allowing Lewis to miss the apex and send Max into a 51 g shunt? Seriously?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 22:47Yes, I said that. [edit, I didn't specify which on board so my apologies]
Another view is on this composite made by one the forum members here:
https://i.imgur.com/oQossKS.png
You can clearly see that Hamilton is all but exactly level with Max as they enter the corner phase. It looks ever more like Max just expected Hamilton to back out or swerve to avoid him as usual - indeed as had happened at the end of the Wellington Straight. But this time that didn't happen.
Let us wait for the moment that this happens to Lewis. It will be interesting....
Indeed so.Hammerfist wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 06:41This pic makes it so obvious what happened. Max definitely squeezed, he should have gone wider, Ham was side by side for a long time. Max just turned in. Amazing so many of these "experts' can't see how simple this incident is. They just penalized hamilton because Max got taken out of the race after a horrific crash. If Max somehow spins but rejoins the race unscathed I'm pretty sure there would be no penalty.
Nice work on the image.
Like most others and I am no SME, my attention to the matter came to this matter of how cost cap is going hinder the teams, when Russell-Bottas incident happened. IMO, there should be an exclusion on the regulation to allow teams to repair/replace the damaged part, outside of the cost cap. The noises are higher now as it may affect the championship fight, unlike in Russell-Bottas incident. Invariably, it may affect Mercedes next. So the team loyalties shouldn't cloud the thought process in this regard.NathanOlder wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 08:55I don't recall you fighting this rule when Russell wiped out Bottas in Imola. I must have missed that. What was the reaction from the Williams fans back then ?Ryar wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 05:34Absolutely. Implementing cost cap is also a process of learnings these undesired impacts on the proceedings. Today it's Red Bull and tomorrow it will be Mercedes, again. So it's critical for FIA to have the cost cap regulations updated. The spirit of budget cap is to stop overspend on development, it shouldn't hamper racing operations just because someone made a dumb move from the other team.fritticaldi wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 02:53Mercedes should pay for the repairs of the Red Bull car since its driver Hamilton was deemed responsible by Michael Masi and the stewards at Race Control. . F1 is on a budget cap and Dr. Helmut Markko is correct in complaining about the costs of fixing the car. Red Bull should not be penalized financially for the accident caused by Hamilton. This is something the FIA should look into and probably implement a system in the near future . Anybody else agree ?
Exactly so. Max pulled across to the right to claim the inside line and assumed that Hamilton would just give up. He then opened the door by pulling left to give himself the best line through the corner. And that opened the door to a car that was several km/h faster at that point and was able to get alongside him.Phil wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 08:45Part of this issue stems from an half assed attempt by Verstappen to protect the inside line sufficiently.
Had he done that with committment, Lewis would have had to go to the outside, where the roles would have been reversed and it would either be Hamilton punted into the barriers or having to back out.
What pretty much happened in the sprint race, only Hamilton took the sensible choice.
It’s really that simple.
Yes, you can try to stick it around the outside and all these diagrams are nice and rosy, but they will always place you in a vulnerable position. Even if Hamilton lost the case on who should be punished, one walked away and could go on to win the race, the other had a first class ticket off the track. Which one is better for the championship?
Of course allowing for big shunt repairs outside of cost cap helps the big teams and not the small teams - the small teams are generally operating below the cost cap level anyway. I can't see it getting through a vote, especially for the teams in the midfield that might be close to the cap level and think they might lose if there is a change.Ryar wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 09:29Like most others and I am no SME, my attention to the matter came to this matter of how cost cap is going hinder the teams, when Russell-Bottas incident happened. IMO, there should be an exclusion on the regulation to allow teams to repair/replace the damaged part, outside of the cost cap. The noises are higher now as it may affect the championship fight, unlike in Russell-Bottas incident. Invariably, it may affect Mercedes next. So the team loyalties shouldn't cloud the thought process in this regard.NathanOlder wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 08:55I don't recall you fighting this rule when Russell wiped out Bottas in Imola. I must have missed that. What was the reaction from the Williams fans back then ?Ryar wrote: ↑20 Jul 2021, 05:34Absolutely. Implementing cost cap is also a process of learnings these undesired impacts on the proceedings. Today it's Red Bull and tomorrow it will be Mercedes, again. So it's critical for FIA to have the cost cap regulations updated. The spirit of budget cap is to stop overspend on development, it shouldn't hamper racing operations just because someone made a dumb move from the other team.