wow we're even arguing about when Lewis and Kimi came across that recovering Williams~? lol I thought that was nothing compared to all the post race stuff handed out this weekend, in both F1 and GP2... lol
at that point of the track yup it was a tarmac run off, but slightly beyond it was grass...
and agree to the point about the only consistency in FIA is their inconsistency~!
No idea, i could not watch Premiere this weekend.
But Niki Lauda , Danner and the other commentator said about Hamiltons manouver, that it was nothing. As many people state.
PS: I would not mind the decision, if they would not be that selective. One time they say: ah, that was nothing, next time: pfui, dont do that, we fine you with your salary for raising your finger, and then sometimes that hard.
I mean they now have the same stewards everywhere, do they take special mentalities each time in different countries when they eat the national foods?
They did away with the impartial guy at the end of last season, they now use 3 local track marshalls overseen by Max Moseley's right hand man, Allan Donnelly, who has business links with Ferrari, Formula 1 Group, and is a European Parliamentary minister and therefore not corrupt. Previously exposed for money laundering over 10m Euro's out of F1 he launched a libel case against the press and won £10,000 on the grounds the magazine could not prove that marshalling a race did not cost over a million Euro's. He was also connected to the F1/Labour funding scandal.
You're missing the entire point. If Hamilton had been forced to make the corner (which he needed to to prevent cutting the track), then he would have had to brake, turn, slot in behind Kimi, and negotiate the corner. By this point, Kimi would have been, maybe, 10 car lengths down the straight, and at a distinct speed advantage. Hamilton cut the track, prevented himself from losing this speed (which was gained momentum over what he would have suffered to stay on-track) and used it to keep in contention and pass Kimi into T1.
As for the whole "he was 6kph slower" crap, that's a moot point. I walk faster than 6kph, and the slightest moment in Kimi's slipstream would have pretty much negated that. And, in light of the above, it's not even a slipstream he should have had.
As for the "passing under yellows" incident - you're all grasping at straws. Hamilton left the track. He, therefore, was not 'passed under yellows', as he was not on the track at the time. Similarly, rejoining the track is the sole responsibility of the person rejoining not the people on the track already. This isn't a motorway slip-road... Of course, this is all presuming that they could even see the yellow flag - after all, the Williams had only spun seconds before they arrived at the corner.
There's no way of knowing how far behind Lewis would have been had he not cut the chicane, and you cannot punish drivers on hypothetical evidence alone. You can only judge on what did happen, not what might have happened.
Kimi might have turned around, driven into the pitlane and run over Ron Dennis for all we know, but you can't punish him for it because it didn't happen.
Anyway, regardless of what people think, this decision is very, very bad for F1. The decision to change a championship result should only be made in circumstances where the rules have been clearly broken - let's say beyond reasonable doubt - and no matter how anybody feels about it, that's certainly not the case here.
i was waiting for a similar comment after I started reading the thread, shame it took so long (some people do seem to be blindfolded here). good post.
Regarding the supposedly yellow flag incident with the williams. Hamilton messed up the turn, got far off from the apex and slid off the track. You guys really believe he did that on purpose to avoid the williams car? That`s nonsense. Had he braked earlier he would have made the inside of the turn just fine passing the williams round the outside of the next left hander. Kimi didn`t get off the track there because he saw hamilton running wide and braked earlier. Nobody would wait for a car that is off the track, why should kimi?
the premiere guys reacted in the spirit of the fia... first of course glad that nothing bad happened
and then one of the commentators asked the other if it might be better for the viewers if the fia ignores the incident and keeps the race and the championship exciting
personally i think bruno should not have been punished... he didnt do anything wrong after all
the lollypop guy on the other hand who as you can clearly see didnt even look down the pitlane when he released bruno shoudl recieve death by lollypop flogging
btw heres a replay of the rosberg incident from itv... and as you can see kimi wasnt the only one who went off in pouhon http://rapidshare.de/files/40423181/itvreplay.avi.html
also you can clearly hear how much of a cock hamilton is
Okay then, Lewis cut the corner, gained an advantage, and was penalised. Sorted. Simple physics will give you that fact. Stop moaning.
I fail to see how so.
You do like saying "regardless of what people think"-esque comments, don't you? No matter which way you look at it, driving in a straight line is always going to be quicker than going around a corner and braking.
You're one of these folks who argues with the TV set, aren't you?
He was ahead of Kimi as they exited the chicane, then he was behind Kimi when they reached the braking zone. That's called gaining an advantage is it?
It is bad for F1 because every sport should be decided on the field of play by its participants, not in a meeting room by unaccountable stewards of dubious impartiality.
They also moved it for the earlier GP2 race. It was just common sense really.
Lets face it, the fact McLaren are allowed anywhere near the F1 circus this year makes my stomach turn. They should have had a 1-3 yr ban in competing and personally I'd be happy if they never won a race again.
Yea, i was watching it live, that was a hash penalty.
Massa did the same in Valencia, and didn't get a shit.
I think they gave Hamilton a penalty because then they will have more battling it the championship.
I felt sorry for Lewis, he did very well to drive that well in that weather, avoids causing an incident , lets Kimi passed (not in time but he still passed) and then put in a wonderful overtaking manouver.
Kinda O/T. What happened for that Williams to end up in the middle of the track?
Seems as though you didn't read my initial post after all.
Free-for-all, anyone? Stewards settle 'disagreements' (for want of a better term) between participants. Who would you have them be accountable to? Another group of people who aren't accountable to anyone?
Facts are required to be true - speculation is not fact. (And before you throw down my 'maybe, 10 car lengths' back at me, note the use of the word 'maybe').
Spiteful much? Let's not get started on Ferrari's record of 'cheating'.
Alonso was in receipt of some of this information, willingly, from Pedro da la Rosa (as found by the FIA hearing)... he saw it, that's for certain Not only that, he was scared off by a rookie! Amazing.
Lauda just nailed this hall thing with his speech, especially " I've always said this is bulls**t, that this is a sport and you have to be neutral, but the decision yesterday makes me believe that everyone is watching Ferrari in a positive way and McLaren in a very negative way."