I think you are being fooled by the fact that Ricciardo locked up. That makes it seem as if he was out of control. Had he not locked up, it would have been a perfectly valid move, by anyone who attempts to overtake another car on the "inside of a corner" vs someone "napping" and sticking to the racing line. The car going for the inside of the corner will *always* compromise his line - e.g. go in steeper, have to brake to a lower speed, turn in sharper vs a car on the racing line that will simply take the widest radius into a corner. Pulling off this kind of move precisely is all about putting your car on the inside corner so that the car you are overtaking can no longer take the 'ideal line', not reach the apex because your car is there and to finish off the move and stop the momentum of the other car, the width of your vehicle together with the track position advantage will block the other car from using its higher momentum.Andres125sx wrote:I think that´s the reason he didn´t get a penalty, it´s not that clear what was their real position related to the other, but to reply your point about Ricciardo was at some point ahead, he was because he went way too long in the braking, so he inevitably will be ahead at some point, but that doesn´t mean he really was ahead.
They did so different lines they never were in parallel, Ricciado was forced to do a much tighter turn so even when he was ahead he was almost stopped, while Rosberg came much faster and judging who was ahead was difficult
Nico Rosberg wrote:"I assumed that it was my corner as I took the ideal line and he went straight on because he braked too late. But he still had his front wing there and didn't back out of it. But the FIA decided not to take any action so I guess no-one was at fault then."
Then link a video of Monza and not these irrelevant videos. It's not my job to make your point for you buddy. Are you trolling me?ChrisF1 wrote:So what about the rule where you must leave a cars width, as per Vettel getting penalised for pushing Alonso round the outside at Monza?komninosm wrote:Those vids show collisions in the breaking zone, not on the turn exit, which is totally different...ChrisF1 wrote:Rosberg-Ricciardo is no different to these imo - ignore the dive up the inside, the collision was nothing to do with that:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37qZKH3P7X4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPd7NJ2StRE
Skip to 1:16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6GLT5VdWH8
Now, on the basis that Ricciardo is wrong, Stevens, Kobayashi and Button are all wrong and should have braked.
People blaming ricciardo have no consistency and seem to be pulling their reasons out of thin air and then ignoring everything when I challenge it.
To me too long is when you can´t take a line to block you rival and he recover the position. If Rosberg would have left some space, since he was going faster (better line) and he was in front, even so Ricciardo wouldn´t have overtook.Tim.Wright wrote:As much as I hate these debates on driver standards - some common sense needs to be applied.
1. What is too late? The fact that he a: got track position on the entry and b: never left the track on the exit suggests it was timed correctly. This is how outbraking maneuvers work. You sacrifice overall corner speed for gaining track position on the turn entry and this is exactly what happened.
2. Where is it specified or implied in any place in the rules that braking "too late" revokes your right to choose your trajectory on the corner exit. It isn't - and that's why no penalty was applied. This is something even drivers struggle to get their heads around:
Nico Rosberg wrote:"I assumed that it was my corner as I took the ideal line and he went straight on because he braked too late. But he still had his front wing there and didn't back out of it. But the FIA decided not to take any action so I guess no-one was at fault then."
On the contrary your point of view is rather pointless and detached from reality because said articles are not specific enough and interpretations of those articles (practical application of rules known as reality) vary in such a random and broad fashion that just pointing to them means nothing in F1 world. Examples:Tim.Wright wrote:My point is, it doesn't really matter what you consider to be "too long"since it's not relevant to the rules in any way.
If you want any discussion about the sporting behaviour to go anywhere besides a pointless argument - you need to be referring every point you make back to specific articles in the sporting regulations.
And... you've hit on the one thing that I think is the single biggest problem in F1.iotar__ wrote:On the contrary your point of view is rather pointless and detached from reality because said articles are not specific enough and interpretations of those articles (practical application of rules known as reality) vary in such a random and broad fashion that just pointing to them means nothing in F1 world.Tim.Wright wrote:My point is, it doesn't really matter what you consider to be "too long"since it's not relevant to the rules in any way.
If you want any discussion about the sporting behaviour to go anywhere besides a pointless argument - you need to be referring every point you make back to specific articles in the sporting regulations.
That´s first thing I did when joining the discussion about Ric-RosTim.Wright wrote:My point is, it doesn't really matter what you consider to be "too long"since it's not relevant to the rules in any way.
If you want any discussion about the sporting behaviour to go anywhere besides a pointless argument - you need to be referring every point you make back to specific articles in the sporting regulations.
Andres125sx wrote:You must leave a cars width... when the car trying to overtake has earned the position, not when the car is still clearly behind. Earned position is when the front wing of the car trying to overtake reach driver´s cockpit of the other car if my memory serve me
In this case Ricciardo had not earned the position, so he should have released the throttle because his front wing was only side by side with Rosberg´s rear wheel, as the puncture prove.
The problem is that this definition of "earned position" doesn't appear anywhere in the rules.Andres125sx wrote:You must leave a cars width... when the car trying to overtake has earned the position, not when the car is still clearly behind. Earned position is when the front wing of the car trying to overtake reach driver´s cockpit of the other car if my memory serve me
In this case Ricciardo had not earned the position, so he should have released the throttle because his front wing was only side by side with Rosberg´s rear wheel, as the puncture prove.
For the avoidance of doubt, if any part of the front wing of the car attempting to pass is alongside the rear wheel of the car in front this will be deemed to be a ‘significant portion’.