dans79 wrote:F1 fanatic published an interesting take on the Rosberg contract negotiation, and team order scenario.
http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2016/06/05/r ... lton-pass/
When the chequered flag fell on the Monaco Grand Prix Rosberg was over a minute and a half behind Hamilton. With that kind of performance disadvantage it was always likely Hamilton was going to get ahead of him through the pit stops one way or another.
So it’s possible to see Rosberg’s decision to let Hamilton go as a prudent call not to unnecessarily antagonise his team on a day when he simply wasn’t able to make the tyres work and was doomed to come out second best to his team mate. Particularly in light of the fact Rosberg is in negotiations to extend his Mercedes contract beyond the end of the year, though he has denied this had a bearing.
But in the final reckoning it’s hard not to see this as a perfect example of why even when Rosberg’s lead peaked at 43 points many people considered it an inevitability that Hamilton would catch and pass him. It’s hard to imagine Hamilton yielding under such circumstances, and it’s even more difficult to imagine him being so much slower than his team mate in a straight fight that it would become necessary to begin with.
I expect the world’s best racing drivers to give no quarter and grant none. Last weekend Rosberg put his hand up and .
0. Write something yourself instead of bringing this lies and nonsense piece from some other site that contradicts itself written by a Hamilton fanatical fan to bang his drum and bash the other driver. Firstly Rosberg "doesn't want to antagonize his team" because of the 43 lead and then "he put his hand up and volunteered to be a number two" That doesn't make any sense. "...was doomed to come out second best to his team mate." No, he wasn't, on the contrary Hamilton was not able to pass, that's reality as opposed to conjecture above and that's why he got team orders and with track position strategy followed. Perhaps he was "doomed" to crash instead?
1. You don't have to imagine Hamilton being slower, you only need to watch F1 with your eyes opened - USA and Silverstone '15. (You want slow Monaco in the rain? 2008) This one was different because it lasted the whole race, in all conditions and all tyres which is enough to think it wasn't some tyres working issue and the fight wasn't straight to begin with. Pace compared to FI and McL another evidence. Team orders used are not a straight fight either and neither are two slow pitstops that cost x postions.
2. Rosberg was forced by his team, there was nothing voluntary about, zero, nil. If you think it was his choice you know nothing about F1. Hamilton's win was gifted by team orders and bad pitstop - indisputable reality as opposed some "volunteered to be nr 2" purple prose garbage.
3. The thing about Mercedes is they're not treating their driver equally, one example: reaction after Spa '14 (some internal punishment) vs pushing off USA '15 and Barcelona crash. Lying and using team orders against one driver and not the other is another "We cannot ask either driver to give up positions or jeopardise their own championship chances for the benefit of the team." That's why one driver can do what he wants and the other cannot. Simple enough?