I believe very little will come of this as well, but not because of incompetence of the FIA. I believe they are very competent, but after the backlash they received last year, and the firing of the race director, they will try everything to avoid changing an outcome of a race or season. They already knew their decision before Japan. Might just be coincidence that they interpreted the points rules to allow RB the maximum allowable points. QUICKLY hit Leclerc with the 5 second penalty to ensure RB get the 1-2 (and although I don't disagree that the 5 second penalty was justified, it could have easily gone the other way... but it's a discussion for another thread). That outcome just makes the penalty easier to manage.dxpetrov wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 14:09I think everyone here gives too much credit to FIA and her competence, which has been proven say the least sketchy times over times.
We should understand that FIA did not dive into the numbers themselves (they didn't check if the money said to be spent for a certain thing was actually spent there)
If that's the case, this means that all they did was make a decision if certain funds spendings are part of the cost cap or not, added it up, and posted the results.
And yes this pretty much says that if a team hid their real expenses somewhere where cost cap is not enforced there is no way of knowing it.
Mark these words there won't be any substantial penalty over this shitshow. Max. a nominal financial penalty, if at all.
Seems like 9 other teams managed to interpret the rules the correct way. I assume RedBull as well knew what the correct way was.chrisc90 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 12:05Yeah, it’s those grey areas that are going to be discussed at great length in the months to come.
RB said this isn’t covered, FIA says it does with no reference to it in the rules.
It’s going to be a long drawn out process, and we will probably have to wait until the ABA report comes out to know where the issue is exactly. Unless RB take the FIA’s ‘offer’ of a fine and we will hear no more about it.
When ferrari "cheated" the same year tha car changed from straight line god to straight line dog and for the subsequent two years was nowhere in term of winnig capability...fourmula1 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 15:03If sporting integrity is #1 there will be very substantial penalties, but Formula 1 is a business and a game. The teams want to protect their brand and image, the FIA (individuals in charge) want the same. Didn't Ferrari just cheat a few years ago? They struck a confidential deal with FIA? Even if RB's "penalty" is to invest 250m into FIA programs and safety research they will take that deal every year if it means winning the championship.
I'm accepting this is all just a game/sport and there is no real obligation to objective sporting integrity so to speak. All I want is fair, clean, close racing on track. Replace the stewards with gravel traps and sensors.
To be fair, it's not known if Ferrari "cheated" or was merely exploiting a loop-hole in the regs. And whether it was not disclosed because of exposure of intellectual property regarding their engine, or if it was simply part of the agreement (We'll keep clean for the next 3 years, and we keep this locked down). But either way, they accepted and basically got screwed for 2+ years because of this, and had to start over.motobaleno wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 15:28When ferrari "cheated" the same year tha car changed from straight line god to straight line dog and for the subsequent two years was nowhere in term of winnig capability...fourmula1 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 15:03If sporting integrity is #1 there will be very substantial penalties, but Formula 1 is a business and a game. The teams want to protect their brand and image, the FIA (individuals in charge) want the same. Didn't Ferrari just cheat a few years ago? They struck a confidential deal with FIA? Even if RB's "penalty" is to invest 250m into FIA programs and safety research they will take that deal every year if it means winning the championship.
I'm accepting this is all just a game/sport and there is no real obligation to objective sporting integrity so to speak. All I want is fair, clean, close racing on track. Replace the stewards with gravel traps and sensors.
Whatever penalty RB will be given if it will preserve the ability to win wil be inevitably considered a joke.
the WHOLE question is here indeed: for the sport to mantain a minimum credit you can either be soft with punishments or hard: depending from the situation both could be accetable but you can NEVER create a situation where someone who cheated goes away with 2 championships untouched
If you cheated you can be forgiven but FOR SURE you cannot win at the same time
Yep, why would you not if can afford it. Pay the fine, take the championships.selvam_e2002 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 16:04To all,
if RB get only penalty( as some $$$), then will all other team follow RB method to get car developed and pay the penalty after an year?
Oh absolutely yes. Unless FIA decides to update the regulations further and close any the ambiguous areas and then tightens up the penalties. Just like they did with multiple fuel flow sensors after knowing one team cheated the single fuel flow sensor. FIA is never proactive, but they do react well once they understand the matter. Let's see if they can do that here too.selvam_e2002 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 16:04To all,
if RB get only penalty( as some $$$), then will all other team follow RB method to get car developed and pay the penalty after an year?
Exactly!
How can you state definitively that the breach is clear cut, considering nothing regarding the nature of the breach, the amount of the breach, and the points of disagreement between RB and the FIA has been communicated?ringo wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 16:47Exactly!
The FIA have retained some of the most competent set of finance people for this.
You would think a bunch of highschool students were doing the audit based on some of the excuses here.
The breach is very clear cut. In the tax world you have avoiding and evasion.
What redbull likely did is "evade" and were caught. It's not a matter of missunderstanding. More than likely attempts were made to classify car related expenses as something else like fleet maintenance and it was uncovered.
The focus should shift to how can the FIA maintain the promise of being equitable.
Mercedes suffered like other teams to cut staff and not bring upgrades to obey the rules...
Likewise ferrari..
So are they to accept that redbull get a fine but still keep their championship won by an unfair advantage?
Whatever is done, must be equitable. It cannot be that others had their hands tied behind their backs in 2021 and 2022 and the one who overspent gets a fine or reprimand.
I think disqualification from both championships in 2021 is fair but harsh. Similar to track and field or any other competitive and equitable sport.
They and anyone else definitely wont try evading again if they realize the FIA are not playing around. The budget cap is very key to saving the sport. Without it we will be in for many more boring championships.