to be fair, Schumacher was a second offender after the Hill/1994 incident what wasn't penalised. The points loss for the whole year was also a bit making that right.foxmulder_ms wrote: ↑25 Jun 2017, 21:45RZS10 wrote: ↑25 Jun 2017, 21:27AMuS: (my comments in brackets)
Hamilton cleared by data, did the same speed on the earlier and the later restarts, Vettel only accelerated there so that Hamilton could not trick him like he did on the first restart where there was a huge gap right away (which means Vettel just did not pay attention and the initial collision was already his fault)
What prevented a DSQ for Vettel was that they felt he acted on the impulse that he was brake tested (which means that _feeling_ you were wronged justifies ramming another car) and they did not want to interfere in the WDC (which they kinda did anyways by handing out a lax penalty)
They were really close to DSQing him though.
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Funniest thing in all this is that Kvyat got a 10s stop&go for driving safely through the field and not rambo-ing through it in order to not collide with those who were warming their tyres in canada - there's just no proportionality in penalties whatsoever.
Are those comments official if so it is a sad sad very sad day for F1. I've been watching F1 since the year Villeneuve won. After Shumi's all points were erased because of intentional ramming during the race. Since than I've never seen anything like this. Intentional ramming has 10 sec penalty, wow. I am really in disbelief. I even think that what Vettel did was even worse since it was not even during the race. He was fighting for basically nothing it was pure teenager road rage.![]()
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But still, yes. Vettel should pay more then two places and a few licence points.