segedunum wrote:WhiteBlue wrote:Well said 747heavy! The moderators usually delete inappropriate remarks. The rule of the board and the reasonable thing to do is respecting each other, regardless of the opinion other people have. Sensible people know that and will have their own opinion of those who cannot be bothered to show respect.
I'm sure we can do better than that. The least that you can do is to stop trolling the board with a justification for that manoeuvre and insulting peoples' intelligence.
In reality what you're saying is that if Rubens tries to overtake he's being dangerous, because that's all he's done there. You're not just trying to justify Schumacher's move, which is one thing in itself and you can certainly have views on, but
you're also trying to say that Rubens is being dangerous at the same time. That's just madness I'm afraid. I'm at a loss to explain that any other way.
I don't think anybody tried to insult your intelligence, segedunum and certainly not the board's intelligence. One can easily have split opinions about Rubens Barichello's pass on Schumacher and be completely sane of mind. I see that your offending remark is now removed and that tells a lot about who is discussing things and who is misbehaving or trolling.
I have never justified Schumacher's driving in this thread. While the race was still running I have said that Schumacher deserves a penalty for not leaving Barichello enough room. Everybody can check that.
Link to my post
It was then argued by the admin of this board that Schumacher made multiple moves on the start/finish straight by changing his line before Barichello took a dive to the inside. Still foto evidence posted by me and video evidence posted by Catalyst
[youtube]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIJLRbU-lDI[/youtube]
show that such reports about Schumacher changing his lines are in error. As the next picture clearly shows
Barichello drives his car on a straight into a gap that points directly into the wall. I'm not alone in the opinion that a racing driver in the seventies would have never done such a thing. It would have been potentially suicidal in one of the old cars to rely on someone else for space. And that is someone who is clearly ahead and may not have seen you or isn't expecting to have to give up his line on a straight piece of tarmac to make place. Place for you which you have not had in the first place, that is.
What follows next is a provoked dangerous move by Schumacher that earned him a penalty which I support and have supported before. Again a sane and calculating driver in a fragile old car would not have pushed his fellow driver within ten centimeters of a concrete wall. That is a bad risk to take for your life and for your fellow driver's life even when he did something foolish in the first place that provoked you. For me such thinking is the yardstick for clean and fair driving.
Schumacher should have steered left to give Rubens more room. Rubens should never have gotten more than half his car off the track and Schumacher still would have made his point that Barichello was driving dangerously. So I think in that situation Michael should have left more room and should have made a complaint about dangerous driving to race control. I recon that the stewards would have looked at it after the race and Rubens would have got the penalty if one was given.
That essentially is my considered opinion. It is supported by all the evidence that we have seen so far. I do not expect that I have to defend my mental health or my forum user status for taking that view.