Vettel has to be penelized TWICE.
1) For causing a collision: He just run into Lewis's back. 10sec stop and go should suffice for this.
2) For teenager road rage: A race ban.
Crystal clear. Anything less is just to please Ferrari.
He should have been disqualified for the road rage incident. The only reason he wasn't was to preserve the championship battle.foxmulder_ms wrote: ↑27 Jun 2017, 01:35Vettel has to be penelized TWICE.
1) For causing a collision: He just run into Lewis's back. 10sec stop and go should suffice for this.
2) For teenager road rage: A race ban.
Crystal clear. Anything less is just to please Ferrari.
Big Mangalhit wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 17:04I think people are overreacting so much. I for one really enjoyed the nudge, it was raw and hot!
It's the kind of thing that if the season continues with this trend will make this an absolute classic maybe even worth of a movie. Arguably 2 of the best drivers in the current era in two of the best teams ever going all out crazy against each other. Man I am so excited for every race this year.
And I know I will get a lot of bash because of safety but I think that is a big overreaction. It was not so unsafe to give a bump tyre on tyre at 50km/h. And no wishbones don't break that easily otherwise we would have so much more catastrophic events. Heck how many times did we see tyre go against tyre at much harder speed, or worse tyre against wall! I mean even this GP many drivers touched the wall with quite more energy and came out fine. Ofc it could've gone wrong but like everything in F1 there is a degree of risk and tbh it was totally acceptable. Not worse than some inside corners dive bombs and whatnot.
Just to be clear I am not arguing about the penalties and whatnot, I am not trying to be a judge here, just a fan.
It wouldn't particularly matter if he had though. He slowed there previous lap, every driver who has led a safety car of been under a safety car absolutely knows the lead driver will slow to create a gap before the final braking zone. This is simple fact, it happens everywhere regardless of driver. Everyone wants to gun it out of the final corner and doesn't want to pass the safety car so a gap must be created. Everyone knows the safety car line here is further from the last braking zone than probably anywhere else, they know the gap must be larger. There were no problems in the first restart, Perez wasn't expecting Hamilton to gun out out of turn 15 and so wasn't up Vettel's tail pipe and didn't come close to hitting Vettel either. Because of the distance the safety car was. If Hamilton absolutely floored it out of turn 15... he would catch the safety car a couple hundred meters max down the start finish straight and have to brake hard. Vettel was in no danger of letting Hamilton get away and had no need at that point to be that close or any reason to believe Hamilton would be anything other than slow to create a gap.Andres125sx wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 17:50I read some years ago a F1 car with a mid downforce setup, when going over 200kmh, just releasing the throttle is decreasing speed faster than a production car apllying full brakes, wich is enlightening about how much drag a F1 produces
But the incident was at around 60-80kmh, when drag and downforce are negligible. Also, FIA said telemetry show Lewis didn´t brake, and didn´t even release the throttle completely, so that cannot be Vettel´s excuse
If you are finding the need to read "unnerving opponents" into someone gently slowing to let the safety car get a decent distance ahead of them, then you're really really really reaching for them being the big bad boogey man.Sieper wrote: ↑27 Jun 2017, 00:29I am not trying to do anything, Hamilton did that himself, you just don't want to recognize it. For sure Hamilton was trying to unnerve Vettel there. He did make a move, but indeed that is fully within the rules, nobody can say he did anything wrong, he was the leader, he can set the pace.
I was referring to the rumours that they were close to DSQ'ing Seb but didn't want to interfere with the championship that were published in AMuS yesterday.Vasconia wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 16:53Fact? is your opinion or perhaps I have missed the statemment where the stewards dediced not to give a DNF to Vettel because of the championship battle.Jordan44 wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 16:46Is there a chance the FIA may call a disciplinary hearing about this?
If I were Mercedes I would be pushing for one in the media. The fact the FIA decided not to give him a DSQ because it would interfere with the championship, is disgusting, and a failure of their duties as stewards.
Thank God someone in the UK doesn´t want to burn Vettel on a pyre:
https://twitter.com/MBrundleF1/status/8 ... 9181275136
Keyword rumours....Jordan44 wrote: ↑27 Jun 2017, 04:31I was referring to the rumours that they were close to DSQ'ing Seb but didn't want to interfere with the championship that were published in AMuS yesterday.Vasconia wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 16:53Fact? is your opinion or perhaps I have missed the statemment where the stewards dediced not to give a DNF to Vettel because of the championship battle.Jordan44 wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 16:46Is there a chance the FIA may call a disciplinary hearing about this?
If I were Mercedes I would be pushing for one in the media. The fact the FIA decided not to give him a DSQ because it would interfere with the championship, is disgusting, and a failure of their duties as stewards.
Thank God someone in the UK doesn´t want to burn Vettel on a pyre:
https://twitter.com/MBrundleF1/status/8 ... 9181275136
Regardless, Brundle has become a corporate muppet since joining Sky. To suggest there has been much worse than deliberately barging into someone is incredibly silly.
Not this crap again...
I start to have some problems to believe what AMusS writes...Jordan44 wrote: ↑27 Jun 2017, 04:31I was referring to the rumours that they were close to DSQ'ing Seb but didn't want to interfere with the championship that were published in AMuS yesterday.Vasconia wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 16:53Fact? is your opinion or perhaps I have missed the statemment where the stewards dediced not to give a DNF to Vettel because of the championship battle.Jordan44 wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 16:46Is there a chance the FIA may call a disciplinary hearing about this?
If I were Mercedes I would be pushing for one in the media. The fact the FIA decided not to give him a DSQ because it would interfere with the championship, is disgusting, and a failure of their duties as stewards.
Thank God someone in the UK doesn´t want to burn Vettel on a pyre:
https://twitter.com/MBrundleF1/status/8 ... 9181275136
Regardless, Brundle has become a corporate muppet since joining Sky. To suggest there has been much worse than deliberately barging into someone is incredibly silly.
I am pretty sure that it was classic Hamilton provocation but I think he didnt expect such an angry reaction from Sebastian. I think(or I hope, I don´t know) that both will be more careful in the future. Or it can be just the opposite, I dont know what to expect from both.iotar__ wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 19:09Onboard is not a good way of judging it apart from Hamilton's mirror driving controlmotobaleno wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 18:55Actually, given that vettel punishment was right, I don't have so clear ideas on hamilton behavior before crash
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=McK56lTYqCk.
- After watching replays it looks worse than live, blatantly slowing down basically mid-to-exit corner, dumbest place to do it and knowing well the other car is close.
- If that's not one sided brake testing I don't know what is. You can stick your half cherry picked, half ignored "data showed".
- Vettel was right to be angry but his reaction was stupid; fortunately LH didn't get away with it.
That's all folks.
He did not brake, its pretty clear, but the footage shows that the speed is decreased just in the exit of the corner, where you would not expect it. Hamilton was playing with fire, as he usually has done in many re-starts. Without the crazy reaction of Vettel(once again, I am not justifying what he did), this would be another debatable tactic from Lewis.Andres125sx wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 18:25Ignoring reality as Bernie is doing there (he keep saying Lewis did brake) is also legal, but that does not mean it´s correct, valid or useful...motobaleno wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 18:21http://www.formulapassion.it/2017/06/f1 ... l-trouble/
Not necessarily in agreement with bernie but useful to remind that different opinions are still legal
thanks god.![]()
Ok, not a great example ... lets use Turkey 2010 - the crash was 100% Vettel's fault but he and Marko blamed Webber for not using beaming technology or magic to remove his car from the track.Gothrek wrote: ↑27 Jun 2017, 08:06Not this crap again...
Did you know there was a multi 12 in an earlier GP that Webber didnt follow?
Seb in the end got past Webber on own merit. (Look it up if you dont believe me) So yes, for it was perfectly normal how he reacted to Multi21.
British press is extremely good at shifting focus. Just as it is doing now.
yes, forgot to mention that too.avatar wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 22:00Not sure I agree with all of that, but to stir the pot again:Manoah2u wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 15:04
dangerous driving - 10 second stop and go penalty ] done and dished, nothing wrong with that.
causing a collision - 5 second time penalty ] he was responsible in the fullest for contact with hamilton's rear end, this penalty was NEVER SERVED
causing a collision - 5 second time penalty ] apart from dangerous driving, he caused yet another collision when he 'dangerously drove' into lewis side.
* Didn't SV get his nose ahead of LH under the safety car too?
I don't know the exact wording of the no overtaking under the safety car rule, but that's another one to throw in.
It was 100% clear that Vettel was wholly and predominantly to blame for all 4 of the above incidents,
"Unless it is clear to the stewards that a driver was wholly or predominantly to blame for an incident no penalty will be imposed."
Article 38.2a of the 2017 FIA Sporting Regulations
drunkf1fan wrote: ↑27 Jun 2017, 02:30Big Mangalhit wrote: ↑26 Jun 2017, 17:04I think people are overreacting so much. I for one really enjoyed the nudge, it was raw and hot!
It's the kind of thing that if the season continues with this trend will make this an absolute classic maybe even worth of a movie. Arguably 2 of the best drivers in the current era in two of the best teams ever going all out crazy against each other. Man I am so excited for every race this year.
And I know I will get a lot of bash because of safety but I think that is a big overreaction. It was not so unsafe to give a bump tyre on tyre at 50km/h. And no wishbones don't break that easily otherwise we would have so much more catastrophic events. Heck how many times did we see tyre go against tyre at much harder speed, or worse tyre against wall! I mean even this GP many drivers touched the wall with quite more energy and came out fine. Ofc it could've gone wrong but like everything in F1 there is a degree of risk and tbh it was totally acceptable. Not worse than some inside corners dive bombs and whatnot.
Just to be clear I am not arguing about the penalties and whatnot, I am not trying to be a judge here, just a fan.
I see this kind of statement everywhere, it's so devoid of logic as to be painful.
The speed a car is going forwards has absolutely nothing to do with how fast the car swerves into the other.
You can be going 300kph forward, but move a couple inches to the side and rub tires with almost no force, you can also be going 25kph forward, but swerve a yard to the right in the same time and produce 10 times the actual impact force.
The speed the cars are when going forwards only has to do with the danger if the car does break. I urge people to rewatch the replay from the angle at the front, the impact causes the entire front of Vettel's car to lift off the track, both front wheels get airborne. It wasn't a small impact at all and people judging the forward speed going forwards are completely missing that the relevant force here is the speed going towards the other car.
But apart from all that, intent, intent matters everywhere. Accidental tyre rubbing while travelling at high speed is just that, accidental. Deliberate impact at ANY speed is entirely unacceptable full stop.