That's your view on it. The internet is good for discussions - but when one already has his mind set; there is no point. I have much better things to do.GrizzleBoy wrote:Cop out.
Sebastian Vettel (11th)
“Most crucially we lost radio communication and that makes it very difficult in these conditions to know what’s going on."
Is it just me or does Team Vettel have more than its share of radio-breakdowns? I recall reading this a number of times in 2010 and 2011. Weird that it is always their radio breaking, it doesn't seem to happen to other teams as much.Christian Horner, Red Bull team principal
"We had lost all radio contact with Sebastian, which meant we could only speak with him via the pit board."
It is totally worth the effort, if he had to try a do or die move to pass I'd agree but he was so much faster that the message by the team was crazy. Very sad day for racingCaito wrote:While a victory is obviously better it's probably not worth risking it for the extra 7 points...
and what happens if a customer Macca/RB car is in front of a Ferrari, Lotus, etc, and finishes ahead of them???????MuseF1 wrote:Customer cars are a bad idea. What happens when a customer Red Bull or Mclaren beats a Caterham or Torro Rosso who have built their own cars? That would be unfair.
And then who gets the constructor's points? HRT or Marrusia just purchased a car and glued it all together
Ray wrote: Everything isn't black and white. Mercedes was hot in the pits last year, are you going to use that as a crutch to support your whining? Get over yourself, we get it. McLaren made mistakes in the pits, they weren't the only ones and like I said above, on the stop Lewis made where the jack didn't go under correctly he was about a foot past his marks.
No radio, eh? Wouldn't know this from the comically frantic instructions they kept transmitting to Vettel in the last lap about stopping on track, taking the checkered flag, or boxing the car. This Horner is a piece of work.zeph wrote:http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/ ... 13167.htmlSebastian Vettel (11th)
“Most crucially we lost radio communication and that makes it very difficult in these conditions to know what’s going on."Christian Horner, Red Bull team principal
"We had lost all radio contact with Sebastian, which meant we could only speak with him via the pit board."
Good point!ArchAngel wrote:No radio, eh? Wouldn't know this from the comically frantic instructions they kept transmitting to Vettel in the last lap about stopping on track, taking the checkered flag, or boxing the car. This Horner is a piece of work.zeph wrote:http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/ ... 13167.htmlSebastian Vettel (11th)
“Most crucially we lost radio communication and that makes it very difficult in these conditions to know what’s going on."Christian Horner, Red Bull team principal
"We had lost all radio contact with Sebastian, which meant we could only speak with him via the pit board."