Your driver made an incredibly dangerous, unpredictable move. Even at full throttle, "dabbing" the brakes 25% (!!!!) doesn't just "kill acceleration slightly," it will knock off at least 10 MPH in the time it would take a closely following car to react. For the life of me, I can't understand how you got it in your head that your driver doesn't deserve any criticism--it was a seriously bad move.
Given that your driver apparently felt compelled to slow down beyond early for the chicane in order to let the 00 car past, he still could have done it cleanly and safely by:
Waiting for the 00 car to pull out from behind, THEN applying the brakes; or
Pulling off the racing line and applying the brakes
Despite the bad outcome for car 00 , this accident has nothing to do with letting car 00 pass..the only real mistake here was trying to get right in front of car 09, when it was too early and too risky. Car 00 didn´t even have to do that. He could just have stayed on the line he had during the passing until the chikane and everything would have been fine... Whether car 09 accelerate or not after the braking isn´t very important, because car 00 shouldn´t have gone to the right after the passing anyway.
This is just a good example of a passing car error. He thinks he has left room for the passed car, but actually he hasn´t.
I mostly agree with this assessment, that the 12 car was drifting right and jittered into the 22. However, I'm interested in what happens after this incident.
After negotiating the chicane, the 12 car (driven by V. Lombardi) exits the hairpin with the 17 car immediately behind. They cross the line in that order, at which point Lombardi does a dance on an off the throttle and brake pedals, result in slight contact and nearly putting himself on his lid. He corrects, keeping it on its wheels (admittedly, it was pretty impressive), then, after being instructed to drive slowly back to pit lane, proceeds to finish the lap at race pace. He skips the pit entrance, driving full-speed up the front stretch, narrowly missing the two cars getting organized for the podium picture.
There's no excuse for that kind of behavior. He:
drove dangerously into T1 after the race had ended
willfully disobeyed instructions to drive slowly back to pit lane
drove dangerously past cars he knew to be stopped on the racing surface
Well on the subject of post-race shenanigans, we have moron face #14 deliberately spinning over the line into the 3rd place car, then spins out after T5 and takes out #05, and then goes through the chicane barriers at full speed.
Drivers have been punished for this kind of shit in the past in NDR events and rightly so.
Too much yadda yadda going on. This is round 1. This is a league to learn and make progress. Much more rounds to go. Let it go, take a deep breath and see you in Kyoto folks.
Too much yadda yadda going on. This is round 1. This is a league to learn and make progress. Much more rounds to go. Let it go, take a deep breath and see you in Kyoto folks.
:bunny:
Well, its sometimes good to tell people about their mistakes, so they can actually learn from it
Can i just say....My noobish mistake at the start of the race will never be repeated again.
Other then that i enjoyed the rest of my race trying to recover from that incident.