RonMexico wrote: ↑29 Jul 2021, 00:59
Diesel wrote: ↑27 Jul 2021, 23:46
Sieper wrote: ↑27 Jul 2021, 16:09
I don’t see why that should be off the table. You can only succesfully lodge a protest if you have provided information the stewards did not yet use when making the original judgement. Since this has been accepted redbull has succeeded in doing so.
They haven't lodged a protest though, it's the right to review. The review might determine there is no new evidence, at which point the investigation won't be reopened. Ferrari did exactly the same after the Canadian GP in 2019.
Also to clarify, they have to provide
new evidence i.e. something that was not available to the stewards at the time of the investigation. Simply restating their opinion using evidence such as telemetry which was already available to the stewards is unlikely to succeed.
I wonder will the new evidence be something like this?
Race control have their own cameras that aren't part of the FOM feed, those cameras are fixed and watch every corner on the circuit. Effectively they would already have a much better fixed position angle of this, so this kind of thing won't count as new evidence.
They also have the telemetry for every car, so again they know anything Red Bull have with regards to the speed of the cars. I am struggling to understand what new evidence Red Bull are likely to present. I suspect it's very much a case of them trying anything possible under the rules because this represents a potentially championship deciding event.
Here's a good overview that talks about what the stewards have:
https://www.skysports.com/watch/video/s ... wards-room
It shows how they can use the the circuits own CCTV system in addition to the FOM footage that us regular punters see.
There is also a somewhat recent precedent for this:
https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/12433 ... w-evidence
The FIA state that all of the evidence provided by Ferrari was already available to the stewards at the time of the decision and did not constitute significant or relevant new evidence. They also noted that the analysis by Karun Chandhok was 'personal opinion by a third party' and dismissed it.
So it seems very unlikely Red Bull have anything they could present that would likely result in a successful appeal. This is just because the option is available to them, and it's potentially the deciding factor in winning the championships so they must at least try.