Good call Ciro. I'll save you the hassle and start with a couple, some glaringly obvious and some which tend to attract a bit of debate.Ciro Pabón wrote:If you wish me to make a list of things made by FIA that favors Ferrari, well, you looked for the wrong guy...
- 2006 Monaco Qualifying incident with M Schmacher. By all rights his actions should have seen him excluded from the grand prix completely. It was one of the most obvious, deliberate and despicable acts of unsporting behavior in motorsport history imo. That he was allow to race at all is a pretty shameful indictment on the FIA. (They had to punish him somehow after video and his silence started to make his porkies less and less believable - he was demoted on the grid).
- Alonso's qualifying penalty in 2006 - one of the most laughably silly decisions made in attempts to even the game up a bit. How convenient that it happened to the only real contender to Schumacher in the driver's championship.
- Ferrari's bargeboards incident in 1999. They were not within the rules and yet were successfully defended as being within a "5% fabrication tolerance"

- The banning of Beryllium in 1999. McLaren had developed engines which used beryllium-alloy pistons - which allowed a longer stroke while retaining the high revs due to them being much lighter. It was within the technical rules at the time. The only team realistically set to benefit from the banning was Ferrari. In October, long after McLaren's 2000 engine was already designed and after some well-known Ferrari lobbying of the FIA on health/safety grounds*, Beryllium was banned - leaving McLaren no time to make a new engine for 2000. In 2000 consequently they ran engines designed with beryllium in mind but made with other materials. The 2000 calendar saw Ferrari win nine races, up from six the previous season. McLaren's Hakkinen suffered mysterious engine failures in the opening two races of the 2000 season. Coincidence?
(* Beryllium, when forged can put off a dust which is a health hazard.)
- The tires.. the tires... the tires. The changes in tire regulations when their were two manufacturers pretty much favoured the Bridgestone runners. More importantly the Bridgestone-shod cars all had to use tires developed in conjunction with Ferrari. Michelin teams all worked together on an 'average' tire based on all of their testing. Ferrari's obvious advantage in this respect wasn't a rule issue.. but after his time at Ferrari Eddie Irvine later mentioned to a number of reporters that their were "special tires" for Michael - which was an absolute infringement of the rules. Everyone has to have the same tires available. Ferrari were quick to stop Irvine repeating his calls... as they also were when Mika Salo claimed during his time with the team they often eavesdropped on other team's radio conversations - also against the sporting rules - and which Ferrari quickly asked Salo to clarify as being "inadvertent" eavesdrops a few days later. Salo's intitial quote is in no doubt despite Todt's attempt to clarify it as innocuous poor memory on Salo's part.
There are more examples too..
Anyway... argue, debate and deny these as you wish. I don't really hold out much hope of convincing anyone of things that aren't consistent with their existing beliefs.
R