Considering The fine doesn't come out of the budget cap, and just 3 years ago Red Bull had a budget of $335M, a 7m fine for cheating is pretty weak/lenient!
https://www.racefans.net/2020/01/02/the ... ams-spent/
Considering The fine doesn't come out of the budget cap, and just 3 years ago Red Bull had a budget of $335M, a 7m fine for cheating is pretty weak/lenient!
Top 3 are still close to 300 mil once all costs are accounted for.dans79 wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 21:21Considering The fine doesn't come out of the budget cap, and just 3 years ago Red Bull had a budget of $335M
.dans79 wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 21:21.
Considering The fine doesn't come out of the budget cap, and just 3 years ago Red Bull had a budget of $335M,
a 7m fine for cheating is pretty weak/lenient!
https://www.racefans.net/2020/01/02/the ... ams-spent/
Let me ask you a question, If someone breaks the rules while playing a game, what do people usually refer to them as?
from the official announcement.6.31 In order for the Cost Cap Administration to enter into an ABA, the relevant F1 Team must:
(a) acknowledge that it has breached these Financial Regulations;
An Accepted Breach Agreement (“ABA”) dated 26 October 2022 has been entered into by the Cost Cap
Administration and Red Bull Racing F1 Team (“RBR”) pursuant to Article 6.28 of the FIA Formula 1 Financial
Regulations (“Financial Regulations”).
That really does depend on whether they broke the rules due intentionally and maliciously, whether they broke the rules unintentionally due to unfamiliarity with them, broke the rules because the rules were unclearly phrased and there is a difference in interpretation, etcetera.dans79 wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 22:04Let me ask you a question, If someone breaks the rules while playing a game, what do people usually refer to them as?
see the first requirement For an ABA
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... iss.11.pdffrom the official announcement.6.31 In order for the Cost Cap Administration to enter into an ABA, the relevant F1 Team must:
(a) acknowledge that it has breached these Financial Regulations;
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... 6.32_1.pdfAn Accepted Breach Agreement (“ABA”) dated 26 October 2022 has been entered into by the Cost Cap
Administration and Red Bull Racing F1 Team (“RBR”) pursuant to Article 6.28 of the FIA Formula 1 Financial
Regulations (“Financial Regulations”).
.
Where I'm from it's more black and white. Either you cheated or you didn't. When "professionals" are involved the penalties are usually extreme.Wouter wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 22:48.
In my native country, cheating means deliberately cheating, on purpose, intentionally, dishonestly or unfairly .
If you play a game and you are doing something wrong but not deliberately/on purpose/intentionally, unfairly or dishonestly, nobody is calling you a chaeter. They only calling you a bit stupid or ignorant.
Wouter wrote: ↑29 Oct 2022, 09:18101FlyingDutchman wrote: ↑29 Oct 2022, 03:26I’ll definitely won’t contribute to this thread again as it brings out the worst of partisan crowds.
I agree. I won't do that anymore too.
.dans79 wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 22:59.Wouter wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 22:48.
In my native country, cheating means deliberately cheating, on purpose, intentionally, dishonestly or unfairly .
If you play a game and you are doing something wrong but not deliberately/on purpose/intentionally, unfairly or dishonestly, nobody is calling you a chaeter. They only calling you a bit stupid or ignorant.
Where I'm from it's more black and white. Either you cheated or you didn't. When "professionals" are involved the penalties are usually extreme.
... that there is no accusation or evidence that RBR has sought at any time to act in bad faith, dishonestly or in fraudulent manner,
nor has it willingly concealed any information from the Cost Cap Administration.
I don't see the word "Cheating". I actually read the opposite.
Thanks again for providing us with that link last week
https://www.fia.com/news/accepted-breac ... ormula-one.
The whole cheating perception remains wild, as the regulations themselves gave space to it by marking a <5% overspend as no more than a minor breach and an according punishment. All teams (especially the ones that used to have overall bigger budgets before the cap) could have easily gone exactly that same route, but just chose to not do so. Most likely that was mainly caused by the uncertainty of the actual punishment from a risk-mitigation perspective, but still it was an option equally open for any team and fully within the regulations.dans79 wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 21:21Considering The fine doesn't come out of the budget cap, and just 3 years ago Red Bull had a budget of $335M, a 7m fine for cheating is pretty weak/lenient!
https://www.racefans.net/2020/01/02/the ... ams-spent/
The reason other teams didn't go over the budget cap was because it was specifically against the rules irrespective of the punishment not being clear. It wasn't a loophole or grey area, it was a straight up "go over this figure and you're guilty of breaching the cap". The FIA was there to be asked for confirmation of what should/shouldn't be included (again, the rules specifically say that teams should ask) so there was no excuse for getting it wrong.langedweil wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 23:38The whole cheating perception remains wild, as the regulations themselves gave space to it by marking a <5% overspend as no more than a minor breach and an according punishment. All teams (especially the ones that used to have overall bigger budgets before the cap) could have easily gone exactly that same route, but just chose to not do so. Most likely that was mainly caused by the uncertainty of the actual punishment from a risk-mitigation perspective, but still it was an option equally open for any team and fully within the regulations.dans79 wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 21:21Considering The fine doesn't come out of the budget cap, and just 3 years ago Red Bull had a budget of $335M, a 7m fine for cheating is pretty weak/lenient!
https://www.racefans.net/2020/01/02/the ... ams-spent/
The main reason for it to happen was simply a poor set of boundaries; well, poor might be too harsh, let's say not tight enough.
It begs the question, out of all teams, why did Redbull decide not to do a dry run.MadMax wrote: ↑01 Nov 2022, 00:08The reason other teams didn't go over the budget cap was because it was specifically against the rules irrespective of the punishment not being clear. It wasn't a loophole or grey area, it was a straight up "go over this figure and you're guilty of breaching the cap". The FIA was there to be asked for confirmation of what should/shouldn't be included (again, the rules specifically say that teams should ask) so there was no excuse for getting it wrong.langedweil wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 23:38The whole cheating perception remains wild, as the regulations themselves gave space to it by marking a <5% overspend as no more than a minor breach and an according punishment. All teams (especially the ones that used to have overall bigger budgets before the cap) could have easily gone exactly that same route, but just chose to not do so. Most likely that was mainly caused by the uncertainty of the actual punishment from a risk-mitigation perspective, but still it was an option equally open for any team and fully within the regulations.dans79 wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 21:21Considering The fine doesn't come out of the budget cap, and just 3 years ago Red Bull had a budget of $335M, a 7m fine for cheating is pretty weak/lenient!
https://www.racefans.net/2020/01/02/the ... ams-spent/
The main reason for it to happen was simply a poor set of boundaries; well, poor might be too harsh, let's say not tight enough.
The reason one team did get it wrong are open to speculation and ranges from simple incompetence all the way to deliberate cheating. There could have been a bit of hubris in there, perhaps, that the team "knew" their interpretation was correct without them checking.
But the reason it happened is not because the rules "allow" it to happen. The team made a decision to take a particular course of action and that course of action put them in breach.
I do come from a different country I don't live in France or switzerland, but that's not really consequential.