zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
and when you thought Ferrari was healed from Todt, Brawn and Montezemolo, they embarrass themselves again.
yuck, brings back memories of Spielberg and other Ferrari finest moments in F1.
says a Ferrari Fanboi.
There are good people on both sides... you know what that sound like? There is no "controversy" there is only dissent and bitterness about the penalty handed because it impacted Ferrari and Vettel. The was no question as per the rules. Don't flatter yourself by calling it anything other than that.
This 100%.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 19:46Hamilton was committed to the corner when Vettel was off track. If, at any point, Hamilton was required to act to avoid a collision during Vettel's rejoin, it's a penalty to Vettel. That's the rule. Argue the rule, not the penalty.
In Monaco, the incident was caused by Max's dive bomb attempt. I have no problem with his attempt, although if he had caused a problem for Hamilton (spin, puncture etc) he would have reserved a penalty. Hamilton was ahead, under control and he has the right to take his line. Vettel left the track and deliberately crowded Hamilton. That's an offence.
Now, one might argue the rule is wrong, but the penalty is in line with the rule and thus entirely justified.
When I saw that I wouldn’t of blamed the FIA if after wetting themselves laughing they had just doubled Vettel’s time penalty for Ferrari utterly wasting their time. I know they couldn’t BTW but that is just a urine take by Ferrari.bonjon1979 wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 20:24I’m sorry...the new ‘overwhelming evidence’ they brought to the review was kharun on the skypad? And people are still arguing about this? Has the world gone completely barmy? Ferrari are using an opinion piece by a sky sports pundit as ‘evidence’. I’m amazed they didn’t quote an autosports forum poll...GROW UP. Your driver made another mistake, by the letter of the ill conceived rules he is guilty and got the minimum penalty possible. Grow a pair and jog on...
Totally. Lock the forum. No more good can possibly be gained by discussing this. I prostrate myself on the moderators altar and beg for mercy.Restomaniac wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 20:53When I saw that I wouldn’t of blamed the FIA if after wetting themselves laughing they had just doubled Vettel’s time penalty for Ferrari utterly wasting their time. I know they couldn’t BTW but that is just a urine take by Ferrari.bonjon1979 wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 20:24I’m sorry...the new ‘overwhelming evidence’ they brought to the review was kharun on the skypad? And people are still arguing about this? Has the world gone completely barmy? Ferrari are using an opinion piece by a sky sports pundit as ‘evidence’. I’m amazed they didn’t quote an autosports forum poll...GROW UP. Your driver made another mistake, by the letter of the ill conceived rules he is guilty and got the minimum penalty possible. Grow a pair and jog on...
According to me the rejoin was safe (see my previous post), then when the dirty wheels were on track there was an overspin (which is not forbidden) and so Vettel had to counter steer sliding to the left.NathanOlder wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 20:33This 100%.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 19:46Hamilton was committed to the corner when Vettel was off track. If, at any point, Hamilton was required to act to avoid a collision during Vettel's rejoin, it's a penalty to Vettel. That's the rule. Argue the rule, not the penalty.
In Monaco, the incident was caused by Max's dive bomb attempt. I have no problem with his attempt, although if he had caused a problem for Hamilton (spin, puncture etc) he would have reserved a penalty. Hamilton was ahead, under control and he has the right to take his line. Vettel left the track and deliberately crowded Hamilton. That's an offence.
Now, one might argue the rule is wrong, but the penalty is in line with the rule and thus entirely justified.
People saying Hamilton should have gone to the left have obviously never even been on a race track, and have never looked at it in a way of a racer.
Here Hamilton has to start deciding which way he is going to go.
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=a48 ... 3761b6d877
The 2nd picture shows how much closer Lewis is in such a short distance, showing how much faster Lewis is travelling compared to Vettel. The line I have drawn is the racing line, the fastest line, and at this time the only line available. Lewis has 2 options, pass on the right or brake hard and wait behind. No racer on the planet will go for the 2nd option. Some people here are saying he should have tried to pass on the left is a complete joke.
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=366 ... aacf2d0b59
Next is where lewis has a large portion of his car alongside Seb, his front wheels are level with sebs rears. As you can see there is still plenty of room for Lewis and Seb should now be turning more left to not crowd Lewis off the track (white line). If seb was unable to stop his car drifting to the right then it means he was out of control still and had rejoined the track in an unsafe manner.
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=99c ... ebfe1327cd
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=45f ... 55a1c684ac
Please if any of you disagree with the penalty look at this and explain how Sebastian is not guilty of breaking a rule.
Or most likely ignore my post as you can't explain a way out if the inevitable penalty that was rightly issued 2 weeks ago.
Incompetence is not a good defense.Xwang wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 21:45According to me the rejoin was safe (see my previous post), then when the dirty wheels were on track there was an overspin (which is not forbidden) and so Vettel had to counter steer sliding to the left.NathanOlder wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 20:33This 100%.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 19:46
Hamilton was committed to the corner when Vettel was off track. If, at any point, Hamilton was required to act to avoid a collision during Vettel's rejoin, it's a penalty to Vettel. That's the rule. Argue the rule, not the penalty.
In Monaco, the incident was caused by Max's dive bomb attempt. I have no problem with his attempt, although if he had caused a problem for Hamilton (spin, puncture etc) he would have reserved a penalty. Hamilton was ahead, under control and he has the right to take his line. Vettel left the track and deliberately crowded Hamilton. That's an offence.
Now, one might argue the rule is wrong, but the penalty is in line with the rule and thus entirely justified.
People saying Hamilton should have gone to the left have obviously never even been on a race track, and have never looked at it in a way of a racer.
Here Hamilton has to start deciding which way he is going to go.
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=a48 ... 3761b6d877
The 2nd picture shows how much closer Lewis is in such a short distance, showing how much faster Lewis is travelling compared to Vettel. The line I have drawn is the racing line, the fastest line, and at this time the only line available. Lewis has 2 options, pass on the right or brake hard and wait behind. No racer on the planet will go for the 2nd option. Some people here are saying he should have tried to pass on the left is a complete joke.
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=366 ... aacf2d0b59
Next is where lewis has a large portion of his car alongside Seb, his front wheels are level with sebs rears. As you can see there is still plenty of room for Lewis and Seb should now be turning more left to not crowd Lewis off the track (white line). If seb was unable to stop his car drifting to the right then it means he was out of control still and had rejoined the track in an unsafe manner.
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=99c ... ebfe1327cd
http://pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=45f ... 55a1c684ac
Please if any of you disagree with the penalty look at this and explain how Sebastian is not guilty of breaking a rule.
Or most likely ignore my post as you can't explain a way out if the inevitable penalty that was rightly issued 2 weeks ago.
So according to me it was a racing incident.
What ? Voice of reason and sanity ?!? Blasphemy !!!NathanOlder wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 20:33Please if any of you disagree with the penalty look at this and explain how Sebastian is not guilty of breaking a rule.
I agree. Earlier I referenced how Button had a similar view regarding the writing of the rules being the real issue here, if any. The real culprit might be fate. The situation, its timing, its location, its context, who it involved, created a perfect storm. Seems like the most contentious/dramatic event in recent seasons.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑21 Jun 2019, 19:46Hamilton was committed to the corner when Vettel was off track. If, at any point, Hamilton was required to act to avoid a collision during Vettel's rejoin, it's a penalty to Vettel. That's the rule. Argue the rule, not the penalty.
...
Now, one might argue the rule is wrong, but the penalty is in line with the rule and thus entirely justified.