about stolen victory for Ferrari; how many races have the FIA and Ferrari stolen from others before?
i can count them if you want! ...Karma
That was just after the pitstop, he was pulling 2 fastest laps and few personal bests after the incident and stretched it to 3.5 sec...but lost all of it after he was informed about the penaltytimbo wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:28It went downhill for the same reason he let Ham from 4.9 sec into DRS zone after the pitstops (which caused the error):siskue2005 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 16:28yes after the incident Vettel pushed immediately and pulled 3.5 sec, then it all went downhill while he was name calling FIAhttps://www.motorsportmagazine.com/repo ... rix-reportHamilton began hauling Vettel back in for the next few laps as Vettel tried to look after his fuel. “The numbers on the steering wheel are correct,” he was informed. “Act accordingly.”
He tried to stretch the gap but he was fuel critical.
oh yeah, the rules when Schumacher was given a 10 second stop go penalty for overtaking in the formation lap?
Lol. You're as deluded as it gets. You claim favouritism towards Mercedes, I guess that must've been the reason Vettel got away with a slap on the wrist when he clobbered Hamilton in a clear fit of road rage two years ago. Also, your delusional mind is playing tricks on you. Mercedes were excluded from a much needed tire test in the middle of that season which very clearly hurt them that year.Carl Mccoy wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 11:58For Liberty Media and FIA, the most important thing is for Mercedes to stay in F1. At Any costs . The issue of tires that favor Mercedes is another matter. In 2013, Mercedes organized an illegal tire test and did not suffer any consequences.
You have been watching f1 for very long have you.
Alas, Schumacher made a rod for his own back and everyone else with his antics, and he is a large part of the reason why we're in the situation we're in.siskue2005 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:41oh yeah, the rules when Schumacher was given a 10 second stop go penalty for overtaking in the formation lap?
and furthur ban from 2 races following it for appealing the decision!
and 1997 stripping schcumacher of entire championship
etc etc..
They had him go long and have fresher tires for later on in case there was a SC. So they split their 2 cars to cover for both eventualities (sc vs no sc). Lec had fallen back sufficiently already before the leaders had their stops, so it was only logical to go for a different plan with him; I don't blame Ferrari here.
In similar fashion Vettel has made a rod for his own back and everyone else with his antics (2017 baku where Vettel was let off with a drive through and apology letter! and another apology letter for calling the FIA race directer "f77k you Charlie" on live tv!)munudeges wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:48Alas, Schumacher made a rod for his own back and everyone else with his antics, and he is a large part of the reason why we're in the situation we're in.siskue2005 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:41oh yeah, the rules when Schumacher was given a 10 second stop go penalty for overtaking in the formation lap?
and furthur ban from 2 races following it for appealing the decision!
and 1997 stripping schcumacher of entire championship
etc etc..
The problem and the difference we have now is we have rules dictating how a driver should drive in any given set of circumstances, often where he has tenths at best to make a decision on the spur of the moment.
Vettel made a mistake on the spur of the moment, while Hamilton made a great split second decision (basically read him like a book) to jam on the brakes and avoid disaster there. That's what separates the very goods from the greats.munudeges wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:48Alas, Schumacher made a rod for his own back and everyone else with his antics, and he is a large part of the reason why we're in the situation we're in.siskue2005 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:41oh yeah, the rules when Schumacher was given a 10 second stop go penalty for overtaking in the formation lap?
and furthur ban from 2 races following it for appealing the decision!
and 1997 stripping schcumacher of entire championship
etc etc..
The problem and the difference we have now is we have rules dictating how a driver should drive in any given set of circumstances, often where he has tenths at best to make a decision on the spur of the moment.
You are making no coherent sense whatsoever.siskue2005 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:51In similar fashion Vettel has made a rod for his own back and everyone else with his antics (2017 baku where Vettel was let off with a drive through and apology letter! and another apology letter for calling the FIA race directer "f77k you Charlie" on live tv!)
The greats anticipate, react and capitalise, as Mansell did with Senna at Hungary in 89. Hamilton didn't manage to do it.
When one sees an incident ahead, car going off road in this example, drivers will tend to reduce speed. Normal behavior on road and track.Shrieker wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:52Vettel made a mistake on the spur of the moment, while Hamilton made a great split second decision (basically read him like a book) to jam on the brakes and avoid disaster there. That's what separates the very goods from the greats.munudeges wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:48Alas, Schumacher made a rod for his own back and everyone else with his antics, and he is a large part of the reason why we're in the situation we're in.siskue2005 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 17:41oh yeah, the rules when Schumacher was given a 10 second stop go penalty for overtaking in the formation lap?
and furthur ban from 2 races following it for appealing the decision!
and 1997 stripping schcumacher of entire championship
etc etc..
The problem and the difference we have now is we have rules dictating how a driver should drive in any given set of circumstances, often where he has tenths at best to make a decision on the spur of the moment.