USAF1FAN wrote:I'm a Ferrari fan, but I do believe that McLaren and Hamilton have been treated unfairly.
Nothing that Ferrari did here today was unfair to McLaren or Lewis Hamilton.
There is a rule against "team orders."
But nothing against team spirit. No orders came from anywhere. Kimi did what he did on his own volition, unless you can prove otherwise, which you can't.
Whether the rule is stupid or not is beside the point--McLaren should demand that it be enforced.
And it is. Next time you hear a team boss ordering one driver to yield position to another, you can bet there will be a sanction handed out.
We all know that Kimi let Massa pass.
Yes, he did.
If the stewards were able to "judge" that Hamilton did not adequately give up his position to Kimi after cutting the chicane in Belgian, then they should also be able to "judge" that Kimi did give up his position to Massa in violation of the rules.
The only reason the stewards were able to do anything with Lewis at Belgium was because there was a specific rule against what he did. As I mentioned above a time or two already, there is no rule against an individual driver giving up position to another on his own volition. In fact, if Fernando Alonso had decided to give up second place to Felipe Massa today, that would have been fine, too.
I don't like protests and especially do not like race results changed by the stewards, but they did overturn Hamilton's win in Belgian, so this protest is only fair. Massa should be put back to third.
Dude...saying the same thing in different ways many times doesn't make the point more valid. And considering McLaren has done this exact thing this season, the point becomes even more moot.