timekiller001 wrote:Fer.Fan wrote:Vary strange...
Alonso din`t receive any penalty for his "Maldonado style" crash. Because of "his" red flag Ferrari and Vettel did`t win.
Alonso is to blame and should receive grid penalty.
That was very far away from Maldonado style. It was a mixture of Alonso trying to maximize slipstream (-> getting out of it as late as possible), Gutierrez in normal race (and not defense) mode plus the usual energy harvesting.
- "Maximizing slipstream"up to a driver and no different to any other overtake incident, weak excuse.
- "the usual energy harvesting." - not usual if it's usual another weak excuse
- What is exactly this Maldonado's style? Is it any different to Hamilton's , Raikkonen's or Alonso's when they crash? The one difference is they get away without penalties. Which style was Alonso's crash in Abu Dhabi, how about the style of one race ban? Three in a row and he should get one.
Another example of penalising based on a name, a team and not events. BTW don't you think it's a bit unfair to not only drag another driver but also the one that's not racing in F1? You should find someone else, I suggest counting crashes (Ricciardo, Raikkonen) and penalty points (Verstappen). Although a person who tried earlier to hype one mediocre Palmer's race as better than the whole Maldonado's career beat you in that regard.
"by dot235 » Mon Mar 21, 2016 8:57 pm Alonso's crash for the big part was caused by malfunctioning Ferrari EPU software. It started recovering the energy and therefore slowing down literally just before the crash."
Fine, how malfunctioning, in numbers? Only this event , the whole race. How big a part? What were the other parts, Alonso's driving perhaps? Remember Perez Canada '14. his car was very much malfunctioning, although admittedly it's not the same.