First lap crash was clearly a racing incident in my mind. Button was on the outside, then backed off and tried to take the racing line, but Grosjean thought that he would stay on the outside and they touched. IIRC Algesuari's car was damaged before he tangled with Hamilton.
The problem with Kimi was that by the looks of it he had absolutely no intention to stay within the race track. He just drove on to the run-off, didn't even try to stay on the track.
If Kimi had of stayed on the track and backed off, an accident would of no doubt occurred, besides, did the people who passed others avoiding the crash at Les Combes have to give the places back?
A couple of interesting images. First is the point at which Raikkonen leaves the track. There are 4 cars ahead of him as he leaves the track and if he had chosen to lift off to stay on the track he would have slotted in at least 5th or 6th position. The second image is the moment when Raikkonen rejoins the track. He is in 3rd/4th position with a run to get 3rd position. No advantage gained? Balls.
Nicky Lauda commented that due the low temperatures in Spa, the "rubbish cars that always struggled with tyre temperature suddenly have their temperatures in the operating window"... Could be an explanation - we'll see if they suck in Monza again...
Yes indeed, congrats to Kimi, he was super agressive from the first sec also having to avoid a Brawn racer stalling the first couple of seconds!
He did the right thing in T1 as agreed and commented by Tom Kristensen and Nicholas Kiesa(danish tv). Both agreed that he really had no other choice, might have been a bit planned, but dont tell me anyone of You guys, would not have done the same thing if You were in the same situation!!,,;p What is this Kimi bashing about anyways, he`s friggin cool guy!!
It's quite funny how 12 months on the regulations which punished a driver who was forced off the track are totally forgotten about when it comes to a driver who deliberately did not use the racetrack to pass cars. More utter BS from the stewards. :rolleyes:
Only if you discount the inside/outside line of the corner and you don't take into consideration the fact Kimi is accelerating round the outside of the corner whilst the drivers on track are trying to negotiate the hairpin. If Kimi had stayed on the track he would have had to lift to give the drivers on the inside the track then slot in behind them which would have put him below 3rd/4th position.
I don't think there would have been an accident if he stayed on either. You can clearly see he would be aside the Toyota with room had he stayed on. And in 4th position as he should have been.
id say theres far too much speculation going on when the facts are much more simple
the field has an almost nonexistant spread of 1.2-1.5 seconds atm and both aero updates and slight differences in how the cars cope with different tracks can easily cause more than have a second difference in pace
its not like there are any rubbish cars this season its just that with the field being that close any slight deviation in performance will cause a massive drop in grid position
And also near the end of the race, somewhere around Pouhon I think, he went out wide and got a better drive out than Hamilton.
This is retarted...... What about Hamilton and Kimi last year at the Bus Stop chicane? If Hamilton would of stayed on the track, Kimi would of crashed into him/spun him.....
Yea, I kinda put my point across bad there, what I was trying to say is that with some peoples' logic here the people who went off and (unintentionally) passed at Les Combes should be penalised as well as Kimi.
IMO it was just lucky that Kimi came out in a good position, because had the BMW's and Trulli got a normal exit from the corner, Kimi would of been behind them for sure.
Yeah ok..... You got me on this one, the speed wasnt big enough to actually properly catch Hamilton.
About the curbs though.... What the hell are you on about? Whats wrong with high riding the curbs? Everyone is doing it...... Actually, it is slower at some places doing that.....
Well if that's the case then so must the FIA who are investigating Renault about last years Singapore GP regarding Piquet's accident which led to Alonso winning. If the FIA believe that is worthy of investigation, then my suspicions aren't that wacky!
So where does the argument come in? If Lewis feels comfortable pushing to the limits while Kimi doesnt, that doesnt exactly make him worse in any way..... Infact, it makes him better....
And yeah, he was so cautious he binned it in the end.....