And, as before, folks are trying to shed some blame onto the driver that was hit.zyphro wrote:That crash is reminiscent of Vettel and Webber in Turkey - Vettel moved into Webber, whilst Webber held position.
Comparing this and the Spa starts, Grosjean has shown twice now that he will clearly interlock his tires with other cars at the start. This may stem from him keeping his vision forward to avoid making contact with his fronts on the other cars, but then forgetting about the rears as he focuses on his line.bhallg2k wrote:I think starts have just gotten into Young Grosjean's head and made him a bit skittish. You can see in this video from Monaco, where he punted Schumacher into the wall and somehow managed to take himself out in the process, that he's apparently pretty easily rattled. When Alonso moved to the left, Grosjean needlessly flinched and gave him more room, which Alonso then took, which made Grosjean flinch again. That last flinch, however, had disastrous implications for his race and that of several others.
Side-note: After watching Monaco and Spa's starts, Sauber just builds their cars to a whole different standard of tough! And Kobyashi, for all his troubles, ought to get a GP win this year.RB7ate9 wrote:Comparing this and the Spa starts, Grosjean has shown twice now that he will clearly interlock his tires with other cars at the start. This may stem from him keeping his vision forward to avoid making contact with his fronts on the other cars, but then forgetting about the rears as he focuses on his line.bhallg2k wrote:I think starts have just gotten into Young Grosjean's head and made him a bit skittish. You can see in this video from Monaco, where he punted Schumacher into the wall and somehow managed to take himself out in the process, that he's apparently pretty easily rattled. When Alonso moved to the left, Grosjean needlessly flinched and gave him more room, which Alonso then took, which made Grosjean flinch again. That last flinch, however, had disastrous implications for his race and that of several others.
Grosjean on-boardbhallg2k wrote:I think starts have just gotten into Young Grosjean's head and made him a bit skittish. You can see in this video from Monaco, where he punted Schumacher into the wall and somehow managed to take himself out in the process, that he's apparently pretty easily rattled. When Alonso moved to the left, Grosjean needlessly flinched and gave him more room, which Alonso then took, which made Grosjean flinch again. That last flinch, however, had disastrous implications for his race and that of several others.
You're right, the initial touch bounced him into Schumacher. I recant statements regarding Monaco.Blue fellow wrote:Grosjean on-boardbhallg2k wrote:I think starts have just gotten into Young Grosjean's head and made him a bit skittish. You can see in this video from Monaco, where he punted Schumacher into the wall and somehow managed to take himself out in the process, that he's apparently pretty easily rattled. When Alonso moved to the left, Grosjean needlessly flinched and gave him more room, which Alonso then took, which made Grosjean flinch again. That last flinch, however, had disastrous implications for his race and that of several others.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x90zXuS1xKc
Last flinch happened because Alonso tried to go between him and the McLaren, and they touched tyres. I don't think it is fair to blame Grosjean in this incident, he wasn't given a choice.
As in that they did it now, this weekend? At some point you have to draw the line and say enough's enough.turbof1 wrote:Well i think most of us agree on the penalty itself, but not in the context it was placed.Jersey Tom wrote:This is pretty clear cut and done with folks. No sense in getting your panties in a bunch over it.
It's not just about this ONE incident. It's a summation of start crashes, and this was the last straw for the stewards.
I'm glad you posted the on-board, because I don't necessarily blame Grosjean for what happened at the start in Monaco, or at Spa for that matter, inasmuch as I don't think he's really done anything egregiously wrong, i.e. he didn't really do anything Malfuctionado-esque. But, he didn't really do anything right, either. His reactions are simply not what they need to be at the start of a race.Blue fellow wrote:Grosjean on-board
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x90zXuS1xKc
Last flinch happened because Alonso tried to go between him and the McLaren, and they touched tyres. I don't think it is fair to blame Grosjean in this incident, he wasn't given a choice.
Look at your screen grab...Grosjean clearly has an overlap as it's called and owns the line.He was nowhere near past him, he has absolutely no right to shove Lewis onto the grass. You must not be watching the same video because it's clear as day he wasn't past him.
I resemble that remark.strad wrote:[...]
it's just too bad you're all crazy
There is one big flaw in your explaination: Lewis never was obliged to brake. Lewis clearly held his line and didn't made any sudden maneuvres. He also gave Grosjean more then enough space. Nothing in this whole story tells lewis should have braked.strad wrote:Look at your screen grab...Grosjean clearly has an overlap as it's called and owns the line.He was nowhere near past him, he has absolutely no right to shove Lewis onto the grass. You must not be watching the same video because it's clear as day he wasn't past him.
IF Hamilton had hit his brakes after contact he would have slowed quicker than the Lotus instead of being glued to his rear there would have been a gap.
Your hero was slow to react and at least half responsible for the incident. I wish we could get his telemetry.
Cumulative??? Are you kidding.
Each instance has to be judged on it's merits, not something that happened two, three, twenty races ago...Hell even my driving indiscretion come off my record after a time.
I think some of you are looking thru rose colored glasses and others are out to penalize past conduct and not giving this incident a fair review.
But hey we won't ever all see these things all the same and I suppose that's a good thing.......
it's just too bad you're all crazy
His race result begs to differ.turbof1 wrote:There is one big flaw in your explaination: Lewis never was obliged to brake.
[...]
The point being that if you don't brake before a sharp turn, you can reasonably expect to hit a tyre barrier pretty hard. However, if you simply hold your line, and drive as close to the edge of the track as you can, while another driver has the entire rest of the track to themselves, you can reasonably expect not to be hit, and not to have to brake.bhallg2k wrote:His race result begs to differ.turbof1 wrote:There is one big flaw in your explaination: Lewis never was obliged to brake.
[...]
For what it's worth, drivers also aren't obliged to brake before a sharp turn. But, doing so is generally a good idea.