hollus wrote: ↑12 Oct 2022, 20:46
Breaching the cap is cheating. This is binary.
This is simply not true. The salary cap is essentially a rule, and a rule written with "penalties" included.
It is a team's choice to "stretch the rule" and accept a risk. Hell, even to deliberately overspend 6 million would not be "plain cheating" as there is an accompanying penalty in the rules. This is F1, all teams push the rules to the limit. And we don't know if they pushed past the limit intentionally or not. We will know in due time, I suppose.
But my point... breaking a rule is binary. That the same is cheating is...not what this is.
Teams systematically push tire pressures al low as they can, to the limit of their tolerances and controls... or they cool the fuel to the limit of what the rules allow, and in occasion get a bit wrong. They break the rule by playing to close to the limit, and the penalty is, say, disqualification from that one race. Or Honda changes 6 enfines in the same race and takes 150 grid slot penalties at once.
That a rule broken, a penalty given, but not cheating.
One accepts certain risks based on the potential penalties.
Maybe a better example is a soccer defender in a game you are winning 1-0. It is minute 93 and your goalkeeper has been beaten, but you are in the goal line, jump, stretch your hands and deflect the ball with your hand as if you were the goalkeeper.
Intentionally deflecting the ball with your hands is not allowed for a defender. But hey, done, and it is not cheating. It is a foul, with a well described punishment in the rules: You get a red card and a penalty kick against. But no goal. In this case, well worth the risk. And no, we normally don't see it that blatant, but yes, we every week see a midfilder stop a fast break in a similar way or by hugging a rival in exchange for a yellow card. The first might be called cheating by some, the second is called "an intelligent midfielder". It is all context dependent.
That it is a measured and calculated risk does not automatically make it cheating.
I don't think trying to frame this as cheating or not cheating helps the discussion, honestly. It might be, it might not be, it might be something in the middle and we simply don't have enough information to judge. But, hey, nuances... nah!
No guys ... this is not true!!!
All the time someone break a rule to get ad advantage is cheating, and this is valid in every single sport.... tennis, golf, athletics and F1 as well.
There is no specific limitation in the number of engine a team can use, you know exactly that changing 6 engines means 150 grid penalty, this is the rule, and the teams is following the rule. Different is if the team try to do everything in order to hide an engine change, this is breaking a rule and cheating.
Using a tire pressure different to what required by a rule is cheating, use engine specification breaking a technical rule is cheating.
You example in soccer is incorrect and not pertinent, this is unfair but not cheating. In soccer if you "pay" a referee so he "close an eye" on a possible penalty is cheating, is you use in the roaster someone that should not play because disqualified is cheating.
Don't confuse unfair behavior with cheating.
if you get steroids to win the tour the france (Amstrong) of Olimpics 100mt gold medal (Ben Johnson) you are cheating and this is a fact.
Coming back to my stupid and personal opinion
1 team vs 10 broken the Cost Cap for 2021 - RBR
RBR won the F1 Championship in 2021 and 2022
My stupid brain is continuously making 1+1 = 2 ... but again, this is not a fact is only a pure opinion.