I watched it like 20 times already. There wasn't anything Piastri could do, even if he locked up the brakes, the collision was inevitable. The Irony is Piastri might have been better off, as he would have clipped Sainz's rear and sent him spinning into the wall. Piastri stayed on his line. Saints weaved all over the place (car length from the inside to car length to the outside. Anyway, I don't want to repeat myself.mwillems wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 10:36As with any corner, you need sufficient cars length alongside and Piastri was not even close I'm afraid. If you do that you create a big danger with little chance of payoff and there is a good chance you will pay for that almost worthless risk.PikeStance wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 10:28At the start, Sainz cut across forcing Piastri to evade towards the inside of the track. Sainz immediately moved to within a car length of the outside of the track where he was behind Hamilton. Sainz then locked up his brakes and veered hard in front of Perez. He then cut clean across Piastri's front nose. If Sainz had taken the same line as Leclerc, nothing would have happened. Norris also took the same line as Piastri, but no one cut him off. So, to argue Piastri lacked experience as an excuse for Sainz over-aggressive start is silly. Moreover, Sainz could have stood his ground against Hamilton. There was quite of bit of space between them.
Sainz goal was to intimidate Piastri to back off and to undercut Hamilton into the corner., Thus having Both Ferrari's in the top three. He failed to intimidate Piastri and Hamilton still maintained good pace through the turn. Piastri undermined the maneuver by having a good start and having no place to go.