Rightfully so, and look at the comments by Stefano Domenicali, typical biased bullshit, there are too many important people in F1 that don't like actual racing, they just want their billboards to parade around the track in formation so they can keep their sponsors happy.
Plus Hamilton braked at his usual braking point and Kimi braked earlier a bit because of the rain. Hamilton dodges Kimi when he brakes early and gets on the brakes and gets along side him. He gets PUSHED off the track (that should be some kind of penalty for Kimi) and uses the escape route to cut through the chicane. He gives the advantage he gained back to Kimi and managed to overtake again because of his braking point which is later then Kimis.
(Gains advantage) - (Gives back time won by that advantage) = Penalty for being safe instead of punting both of them?
You do realise how absurd this conversation is? The initial problem here is that there is a chicane you can cut.
Second of all, and I think I said it before, Hamilton being along side of him on the outside isn't really the ideal place to try and overtake. No-one is ever going to give room there. and why should anyone? IIRC a longer route takes, well longer, so he won't be alongside in the middle of chicane anymore.
The points you raise in the other thread are not contraversial amp88. The decisions which cause upset and the belief of bias, it is a belief that runs through people within the paddock too incidentally (see Brundle's recent Q&A).
If there is something in the FIA rulebook about not passing a car at the next corner after handing a place back i'll accept the decision. I'm not aware of any such rule. What I saw was the place being given back and the mommentum advantage being given away, and Kimi loosing his nerve at the next corner and braking like a pansy (again).
I am aware that Lewis had significant overlap on Kimi when Kimi turned in on him.
I'm also keen to see the Kimi pass on Lewis where Nico Rosberg was spun as i'm curious to know whether or not it was under yellow flag.
Well no shit sherlock but then you (mister kimi) wouldn't have been able to finish the race due to major suspension damage or he (hamilton) wouldn't have finished the race because you (master kimi) would have pushed him into the wall and you (master kimi) wouldn't have gotten a friggen penalty for it because your in a red car!
Does Hamilton have the right to be on Kimi's outside? Yes. Does Kimi have the right to push someone off the track? No. (Yes because he's driving a red car actually.)
And what if he's not alongside? He got pushed off while being practicly alongside... He is allowed to go on the outside there is no rule stating that he cant. I'm pretty sure on the other hand that there is a rule which prevents hitting someone off the track.
He was, he actually still had significant overlap at the second part of the corner and Kimi turned in on him, Lewis took to the escape route to avoid a crash.
Well it was plain stupid. Massa was saying his 2nd place was luck, imagine now that his only 2 points behind Lewis. Hamilton won, end of story. I reckon Massa vs. Kubica (Japan last year) was much worse, with *lots* of contact and people actually overtaking from outside the track. So ok, it was unfair and you're right to complain.
On a side note, I must say this because some people here have selective memory: Hockenheim 2008, Hamilton overtakes Massa at the hairpin and pushes him out of the track on the corner exit. Massa backs off to avoid colision. Now I remember people saying in this very forum that that move was pure genius and that's how racing/things are. So stop complaining about Kimi pushing people off track, he did *exactly* what Lewis did.
Thats because Kimi forced him off the track. If Kimi didn't force him off the track he would have passed at the chicane. That's a fact!
EDIT: I've just seen that Hamilton didn't get the win - they should seriously just stop F1. Everytime gets passed with a tiny bit of contact or anything like that they cry until the stewards fix it. Stop whining like little bitches and drive your damn cars around the other ones. Its pathetic that the championship is decided on who is penalised the least rather than who's the bloody quickest at driving the car.
He was much faster than Kimi at that stage of the race - look how easily he passed him into La Source. He may have thought it was worth a try around the outside once he realised how far infront he'd got after braking.
Maybe he should've backed off before the left-hand corner, maybe that would've been wiser, but he didn't deserve a 25s penalty for it. I've never seen a time penalty given for an incident like that before, where no advantage was gained. In fact I've seen Ferraris do much worse than that repeatedly and not get penalised (again, Schumacher, in Hungary).