codetower wrote: ↑07 Dec 2021, 00:35
He asked "why move across to the left about a second after". 5 seconds is a lot of track to cover going 250+ kph. Looked like the before shot was coming into the turn.
here is the track just before the accident. Looked like there was room to pass. I personally don't care either way. I'm not saying it wasn't an a-hole move by Verstappen, but Hamilton is not as innocent in all this either.
https://dc769.4shared.com/img/Nagpmyppi ... -crash.jpg
What the still images fail to show, is the context of the situation, that being;
Max was leading the championship by 8 points going into this race with 9 wins. A win would effectively increase the points gap for the last race to 14-16 points (depending on who gets the fastest lap point). With one more race, this practically hands the WDC to Max, as a win by Lewis would mean Max could finish 4th, if not 5th and still win the championship.
More importantly, a DNF for both Lewis and Max in Jeddah would keep the points gap at 8 points, also ensuring Max wins the WDC if he finishes 2nd.
Of course, Hamilton winning Jeddah nullfies that advantage and the last race becomes a must win for either unless neither of them score which again hands it to Verstappen.
Then we arrive at Jeddah and there are 3 incidents during the race before we even get to the brake-test;
Lap 15
The first restart after the red flag when Hamilton gets a better start and has the high ground going into T1 and Verstappen passes around the outside off the track and then rejoins at an impossible angle forcing Hamilton to avoid a collision (which then also gives Ocon the run on Hamilton). Verstappen here engages in a very dangerous maneuver, rejoins in an unsafe manner and is risking potential damage by cutting in ahead of Hamilton.
Lap 17
Second restart after the 2nd red flag, when he goes to the inside and squeezes through:
Check their trajectories and also bear in mind that the car on the inside has the steepest angle to make the turn, thus requires a lower speed to safely make the corner while also leaving room for the other two drivers ahead. With no regard to this, Verstappen brakes last and takes the corner leaving Hamilton again in a sandwich and little options to avoid a collision. You can call it balsy, brilliant, but clearly, Verstappen is risking damage by going into a gap with speed that doesn't allow room for the other cars knowing full well that both cars to his right are going to turn into him. This is no different than "going in hot" or into gap that is closing. A driver not wanting to risk his car would never have done such a maneuver as it's pretty much a guarantee crash waiting to happen.
Lap 37
The incident that led to him having to give back the position in the first place - again, Hamilton has the overlap and speed differential, is on the outside and ahead and can carry more speed into T1, yet Verstappen goes in "hot" with no hope of ever making that corner and plows straight through - again with Hamilton having to protect his car and avoiding collision. This isn't racing, this is outright dangerous driving and clearly risking again his own and his opponents car.
Now fast forward a lap forward when out of the blue in a high speed left hander, Verstappen decelerates while making erratic movements, forcing Hamilton again to brake and lose his momentum and then right behind him while occupying the center of the track, taps the brakes.
If - again - the intentions were sincere, why not stay on the far right of the corner? Tapping the brakes wasn't even necessary too to let someone by. I stand 100% behind my assessment that Hamilton had no clue what was happening and the intentions of Verstappen wanting (or being ordered) to let him by. The erratic movements gave him no choice but to completely slow to the speed of Verstappen. At that point, there was zero reason to assume that Verstappen would even tap the brakes to seek the collision. I'm baffled some would even try to justify these kind of actions.
I'm shocked this wasn't an immediate disqualification from the race. He (or anyone else) would deserve nothing less than that.