BMMR61 wrote: ↑19 Sep 2023, 06:56
@mwillems - I don't expect to change your mind as you are pretty invested into particularly, the Norris part of the overtake. tbh I'm in two minds about the second part but first want to give my perspective on Lewis's placement and speed at the point George is turning right towards the second apex. George has every right to take the inside of the second apex to the right, Lewis well before this point had zero right to this line and knew it. So he was on a line he would be obligated to drop speed and pull in behind George, albeit on a far more left pointing trajectory. This line would have meant a very compromised exit speed by Lewis and probably even meant Lando would have blown past him on the straight if he genuinely tried to navigate the whole corner bailing from George's rear. His alternate action was what we saw.
So my dilemma on the Lando pass is does Lewis so compromise the RH part of the esses by a very speculative lunge that Lando would have on the optimum line blown past on the exit. It's very open to debate but we've seen all manner of rule interpretations to make this one seem not too out of the ordinary. I do disagree firmly with the notion that he didn't need to give back the place to George - slam dunk!
I'm invested in an open discussion around the rules and what makes it right or wrong, not the outcome. The frustration is that in the Mclaren Forum that is often not easy due to fans having a predetermined idea of what's right and not discussing what makes it right or wrong. Instead it's a case of expressing frustration that it is obvious to them and why are we discussing it when it clearly isn't, or simply having the belief you can read Hamiltons mind or intentions is enough, or saying he is going too fast, which is not a breach of any rules and not any kind of answer, it's the point of the sport.
Let's put it this way, if Lando had been made to give the place back this will be a long discussion and an individual would be saying how unfair it was for decades and linking it to the $100m fine.
So I think how clear cut this is is more of a convenience than a truth.
There is precedent from first lap incidents and overtakes, around leeway on the first lap when space is tight and a precent from this year with Russell completing an overtake on Piastri off track. I want to try to understand how and why the stewards treated this differently to the overtake on Perez when Hamilton went off track and to when Russell passed Piastri off track on the run off in Spain this year. That and the fact that the Hamilton/Norris/Russell overtake was a more complex manoeuvre which asks the question, when is an overtake complete? And I'm kind of hung up on understanding that. Many of the replies instead claim to be able to read Hamiltons mind or state reasons that aren't what any steward would consider. Going too fast isn't an answer, you're supposed to go faster, if you can demonstrate the car has shed it's speed at the apex then this isn't a valid argument and I'm not sure that that conclusion is that subjective.
So I agree that the Russell place needed to go back, I guess my point was that it was a viable attempt at an overtake that didn't pan out, so how does this affect Lando and why does it invalidate the Lando overtake? And the dilema you state at the end is the same as mine. Which is why I ask the question what makes an overtake complete and valid.
Hamilton had cleared Lando's car and turned in to the corner and pointed to the next apex. it's a very strong argument for a complete move. So my only thought is that they treated it as a single move, which seems odd, and that this then decided the two moves on who owned the space into the next corner or out of the last, which was Russell hence the onus on who was on the inside or on the outside. It seems Hamiltons turn right was just a smidge before halfway between the Apex'.
It's inconsistent with other decisions and whilst I couldn't think what they were, others had helpfully posted them in other threads and the outcome I'm interested from this is to understand it more, not to dispute or complain.
it is what it is. Inconsistent, but the stewards would have had some sort of logic that I don't think has been hit on yet, but who knows.