Only if he was far-enough along side going into the corner, which he wasn’tmwillems wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:41But by the rules Russel should give him a cars width, no?the EDGE wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:38Correct… because everyone else made sure they wasn’t in that position, by slowing down and falling-in behind the car in front, Lewis knew Russell would force him wide and knew he could go off-track, he did so, he gained an advantage on Lando by doing so, he had to give the place back
Had he of slowed and fell in behind Russell, Lando would have had the chance to fight for the position
He knows he messed up, a good qualifying and he could have very well won that, let's hope he sorts his qualifying struggles for Suzuka.astralx wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:26yes, he didnt had enough, thats true, to pass you need on this track much bigger delta( 1,5s or even more) or a gift....
They were approaching the next apex and well past the previous is my view of it, but I suppose that is where the line might be.the EDGE wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:44Only if he was far-enough along side going into the corner, which he wasn’tmwillems wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:41But by the rules Russel should give him a cars width, no?the EDGE wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:38
Correct… because everyone else made sure they wasn’t in that position, by slowing down and falling-in behind the car in front, Lewis knew Russell would force him wide and knew he could go off-track, he did so, he gained an advantage on Lando by doing so, he had to give the place back
Had he of slowed and fell in behind Russell, Lando would have had the chance to fight for the position
You can’t just divebomb and expect the car who’s travelling on the fastest line of the apex to all of a sudden move left to accommodate. He’s driving into a disappearing wedge and judging by how quickly he went full gas down the escape road he knew it very early on.mwillems wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:48They were approaching the next apex and well past the previous is my view of it, but I suppose that is where the line might be.
Overtaking on the outside suggests you need the car the be in front of the defending car. Overtaking on the inside deems you just need the front wheels alongside.
So I guess when I look at this I see them past and exiting that corner and coming in to the next with Hamilton on the inside, the move to the right by Ham is made just before the apex of the next corner with Russell closing off his move into the next corner.
I don't think it is as clear cut as some want to think, and still don't agree with the decision even though I'm a Lando fan, but I can at least understand it in detail having had some sensible discussion.
It wasn't about speed and never was about speed, IT WAS ABOUT WHETHER HE WAS ON THE INSIDE OR OUTSIDE and who owned the space. For those that need caps to make a point And their positioning inbetween two corners crates a gray area.
However, I still don't think that should have had anything to do with the move on Lando.
I felt he was almost alongside and in control in the first turn so didn't consider it divebombing as such. If he was half a meter further forward on that move it would be his space, that's how close the margin was.101FlyingDutchman wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 22:45You can’t just divebomb and expect the car who’s travelling on the fastest line of the apex to all of a sudden move left to accommodate. He’s driving into a disappearing wedge and judging by how quickly he went full gas down the escape road he knew it very early on.mwillems wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:48They were approaching the next apex and well past the previous is my view of it, but I suppose that is where the line might be.
Overtaking on the outside suggests you need the car the be in front of the defending car. Overtaking on the inside deems you just need the front wheels alongside.
So I guess when I look at this I see them past and exiting that corner and coming in to the next with Hamilton on the inside, the move to the right by Ham is made just before the apex of the next corner with Russell closing off his move into the next corner.
I don't think it is as clear cut as some want to think, and still don't agree with the decision even though I'm a Lando fan, but I can at least understand it in detail having had some sensible discussion.
It wasn't about speed and never was about speed, IT WAS ABOUT WHETHER HE WAS ON THE INSIDE OR OUTSIDE and who owned the space. For those that need caps to make a point And their positioning inbetween two corners crates a gray area.
However, I still don't think that should have had anything to do with the move on Lando.
Not 1,5, a bit less. Unless the frontrunner is determined to keep you at bay (which ofcourse all 3 in front of Hamilton would have been in that phase of the race).astralx wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 19:26yes, he didnt had enough, thats true, to pass you need on this track much bigger delta( 1,5s or even more) or a gift....
RZS10 wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 20:37If you check the far offboard replay which was posted here as a gif you can see that Hamilton seemingly had no overspeed relative to Russell from a certain point onwards, he was very likely capable of making the corner whilst already having completed the overtake on Norris.dialtone wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 17:59[...] Hamilton’s move was so extreme that I would want to see telemetry of his speed there vs next lap because I think Stewards basically saw that he passed Norris because he had no intention of making the corner.
I’m not saying he wasn’t going to make it but his speed was high and he just went straight very quickly after George allegedly pushed him.
Arguably the precedent for this move being perfectly fine was Lewis' own team mate in Spain (highlight vid as a refresher if needed)
That was Russell's position relative to Piastri, the only explanation of why Russell did not have to give the position back is that it was deemed he had completed the overtake:
He bailed before he was actually ran out of road, a bit before the halfway point between apexes:
He then went around the bollard and kept the position ahead of Piastri.
And now for comparison:
I'm relatively certain Norris has no part of his car alongside of Lewis from this point onward, if Russell was deemed to have completed the overtake on Piastri in Spain, then this is certainly the case here.
From the gif mentioned above: a few frames in which Hamilton's position to Russell doesn't change significantly, the logical conclusion is that he has shed any extra speed and is not going significantly faster than Russell, if at all.
The consequence of that is that he would have been fully capable of making the corner if given the space.
He then bails before he is actually ran out of road, a bit before the halfway point between apexes:
He absolutely had to give the position back to Russell, of course - Norris? Not so sure, but definitely not if the FIA/stewards/race control were consistent.
He admitted as much after the race. One thing about Hamilton, even if one doesn't like the bloke, one has to admit that he does admit it when he knows he's messed up.
The pace did not dissapear. You cannot look at lap times in isolation. There is a slower moving object in front of any car, it will have to do slower than it is capable of. Hamilton ran into russel and literally held back and waited. He had more pace in hand. It was obvious.Astro85 wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 13:34I have just watched those moments now, after Hamilton passed Leclerc he was around 1.3 secs behind Russell, it then went up to around 1.8 secs and stabilized, Hamilton then started reeling him in and was around 1.1-1.3 secs behind by the time Russell had caught up to Norris. As I said, his blistering pace relative to Russell had disappeared by the time he passed Leclerc.mkay wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 13:20That is inaccurate. Gap increased to 2s after HAM passed LEC and HAM was 1.3s faster over the next 3 laps after which they remained in the DRS train until the end.Astro85 wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 11:22
Emotions often get in the way of common sense. The truth is, Hamilton had blistering pace for a number of laps but by the time he had passed Leclerc that blistering pace relative to Russell had all but disappeared. The gap stayed consistent for a few laps and then he was slightly faster until they both came up to Norris.
It was also quite visible to see on track. Russell had traction issues with the rears likely overheating while Hamilton was able to take tighter lines into corners.
And some people use that against him. I've seen a few articles with headlines refering to the "I'm so slow" Hamilton over the past weekend. Some posters love to jump at him for that too. He has nothing else to prove so he can afford to be honest. A guy like Russell cannot talk like that because he's just not established yet.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Sep 2023, 00:19He admitted as much after the race. One thing about Hamilton, even if one doesn't like the bloke, one has to admit that he does admit it when he knows he's messed up.
Because if anyone is to blame, it's Yuki.dialtone wrote:
Source:
Let's remember this wasn't set as a penalty for Perez, destroyed a car.