Pretty weak arguments really.ab_f1 wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 13:27I think below is a good post on twitter in giving full picture.Cs98 wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 13:19The root cause of the collision was Hamilton understeering into the side of Perez. Perez gave Hamilton space on the inside and his reward for that was a big fat hole in his sidepod which ruined his race. That's a penalty, wet or dry. In fact, 5 seconds is not a hefty price for putting someone out of a race and being predominantly at fault.taperoo2k wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 12:56Then F1 shouldn't hold races in the wet, or they should just be led around by the safety car.
The FIA can tell from the steering inputs of a driver and footage we don't see if a driver has made
a deliberate move to push another driver off the track. The root cause of the collision was Perez's inters going off, introducing a gap most drivers would go for.
I'd be saying the same thing if Max had collided with Perez. It was a racing incident in the wet, nothing more.
When two people are side by side they both have to compromise their speed and lines to fit through the corner together, that's part of racing side by side. This notion that because Hamilton wasn't on the optimal racing line he is excused of any wrongdoing is hogwash. Neither driver was on the optimal line but ultimately it was Hamilton that carried too much speed and understeered into the side of Perez. That's a penalty. Can't just understeer into people, ruin their race, and then call everything a "racing incident".
As far as the consequence shouldn't affect penalties. If you make enough contact to rip a hole in the sidepod and damage the floor I'd say you've hit someone hard enough for a penalty to be a consideration. If the stewards really wanted to penalize the consequence then they should've given something harsher than the smallest penalty available.