If you really think this, sorry to say this but you´re quite naive.DChemTech wrote: ↑06 Dec 2021, 12:56Yes I know. We could see him release the throttle, shift down, slow down, and wait for Hamilton to pass. Which Hamilton did not. At that point, it's not outrageous to think "maybe slowing down further will get the message across". And as said, it was poor judgement to do so given the position Lewis was at, but then again, the position that Lewis was at was poor judgement given the fact of how much Max was already slowing down. Miscommunication and poor judgement, not intent.Andres125sx wrote: ↑06 Dec 2021, 12:53Maybe people don´t know, but a F1 car releasing the throttle slows down faster than any production car with full brakes applied. No need to hit the brakes to let any other car pass, much less when you´re at 150km/h at a 300km/h straight, and even less when the other car is at your gearboxDChemTech wrote: ↑06 Dec 2021, 12:36
You are still assigning intent here.
There is a difference between brake-testing to get someone to ram into you, or braking because you were instructed to let someone by, and that person is not passing you. And yes, he braked at a strange time and place, but that still doesn't mean he did it with intent - he was probably expecting Hamilton to pass by using the gap on the left, or maybe he didn't really consider that Lewis was so close behind him (yes, which is dumb, but not intentional) out of frustration that Lewis was not passing despite the instructions. Then there was the whole aspect of poor communication, with one driver being instructed on the pass, and the other not. All these things weigh in.
It was a brake test, plain and simple.
Max perfectly know Lewis was into his gearbox, hitting the brakes at that point is intentional, like it or not