Pondrew said:I hope Bottas got his wages docked for this race. He was worse than useless.
And that’s why Lewis loves him
Pondrew said:I hope Bottas got his wages docked for this race. He was worse than useless.
As far as I'm aware, it's not against the rules - the cars are allowed a maximum of 100Kg of fuel, and it's normal practice to put in less than that if they think they can complete the race on less fuel. The scrutineers need to be able to draw a minimum 1L sample after the race for testing - this is what led to Vettel's DQ in Hungary.Nanu said:If he was under fuelled it would be picked up by the stewards who weigh the cars before the race and do al sorts of tests on the cars after. Not even sure its against the rules but suspect it would be.
I disagree, not because it's likely to change the result but it may get the FIA to enforce rules 'as they are written'DPG said:Mercedes need to let this go now. An appeal won’t make a jot of difference now.
PerryGunn said:At the moment the FIA is effectively saying that Masi doesn't have to follow the FIA F1 Sporting Regulations - if the Race Director doesn't have to follow them, what the hell are they written for?
I have no doubt that the FIA panel (the next stage of appeal) won't rock the boat but I think you can then expect Mercedes to take it to CAS for an independent assessment of the case - they are the ultimate arbiters and can overrule the FIA - that'll be when the FIA may come to an agreement regarding the Race Director having the ability to be 'flexible' with the rulessp3ctre said:Needs to go down as a “bad ref” decision then, same as in football. It shouldn’t change the result but the ref should be sanctioned. Pretty sure the appeal court are not going to allow the result to change, the damage it would do to the FIA’s reputation would be horrific.
PerryGunn said:I have no doubt that the FIA panel (the next stage of appeal) won't rock the boat but I think you can then expect Mercedes to take it to CAS for an independent assessment of the case - they are the ultimate arbiters and can overrule the FIA - that'll be when the FIA may come to an agreement regarding the Race Director having the ability to be 'flexible' with the rules
Agreed. As DC said; without Max, Lewis would have won about 6 races ago, which is pretty boring (even for us Lewis fans).sp3ctre said:Love him or loathe him, he is blimmen fast!
Pondrew said:George quite has the fighting spirit of those two
PerryGunn said:AISI it's not about who won or how they drove, it's about being able to rely on the written rules - the teams sign up to the rules at the start of each season and they become, in effect, a contract between the team and the FIA.john-e89 said:Honestly all this whingeing over a guy that races like they used to in't tholden days....what do you guys want, a traffic light system saying wether they're allowed to make a move or not...? Teddy bears for comfort when they're passed...? Whinge machine Hammy was even crying about Perez FFS...! What a 42 carat Ponce...! Man the f**k up, either race or retire, but shut the moaning when someone passes with a hard manoeuvre...James Hunt for one wI'll be turning in his grave..! :lol: :wink:
If the Race Director can change/ignore the written rules whenever he/she wishes it means the teams have no standard reference and, potentially, the result of every race can be decided by the whim of the Race Director.
Not really, IIRC the Silverstone decision was made by the stewards (as required by the rules) not by Masi, he'd have had no say in it.john-e89 said:Like it was at Silverstone...
PerryGunn said:Not really, IIRC the Silverstone decision was made by the stewards (as required by the rules) not by Masi, he'd have had no say in it.john-e89 said:Like it was at Silverstone...
The stewards rule on racing incidents, applicable penalties, technical infringements etc. They may communicate their decisions via the Race Director/Clerk of the course but he has no say in those decisions.
The Race Director is not a steward, he's in charge of how practice, qualifying and the race itself is run along with safety (safety cars, virtual safety cars, red flags) etc. and the restarts after SC/VSC/RF but he's supposed to do so according to the FIA regulations.
The stewards view of an incident may come down to opinion & interpretation of a racing incident but the Race Director is supposed to follow the rules as written - some of those rules do allow for judgement calls but most of those are safety related e.g. 'If in the opinion of the Race Director it is unsafe to...."
By the same token, you can't/shouldn't have a Race Director that changes the rules - he's supposed to know them inside out and apply them as written. As I said earlier, it's not about the result, it's about following FIA regulations.john-e89 said:You can't have a race director and not let him make a quick decision, may as well not have one.
PerryGunn said:By the same token, you can't/shouldn't have a Race Director that changes the rules - he's supposed to know them inside out and apply them as written. As I said earlier, it's not about the result, it's about following FIA regulations.john-e89 said:You can't have a race director and not let him make a quick decision, may as well not have one.
In the case of the cars unlapping themselves, according to the regulations he only had two choices either no unlapping or all cars unlapping themselves - he chose neither and allowed selected cars to unlap themselves and there's nothing in the regulations that allows him to take that option. In addition, he also ignored the regulation that says the safety car has to complete an additional lap after the unlapping.
If he had to make a quick decision it would have been between none/all cars unlapping as those are the choices in the rulebook. If he'd decided on no unlapping, the safety car could have come in that lap and there would have been one racing lap left. Deciding to allow selected cars to unlap and then bring the safety car in immediately was obviously a considered decision to ignore the regulations in the interest of creating a last lap spectacle - but that's not within his remit!
PerryGunn said:Deciding to allow selected cars to unlap and then bring the safety car in immediately was obviously a considered decision
PerryGunn said:In the case of the cars unlapping themselves, according to the regulations he only had two choices either no unlapping or all cars unlapping themselves - he chose neither and allowed selected cars to unlap themselves and there's nothing in the regulations that allows him to take that option. In addition, he also ignored the regulation that says the safety car has to complete an additional lap after the unlapping.
If he had to make a quick decision it would have been between none/all cars unlapping as those are the choices in the rulebook. If he'd decided on no unlapping, the safety car could have come in that lap and there would have been one racing lap left. Deciding to allow selected cars to unlap and then bring the safety car in immediately was obviously a considered decision to ignore the regulations in the interest of creating a last lap spectacle - but that's not within his remit!
Silverstone had a massive impact (pun intended) on the championship. Lewis gained 25 points and Max 0. Not only that but Max's engine was cracked and had to be changed at the next race, penalising him further. Retribution was due and was delivered yesterday. Congrats. to Max and Red Bull.john-e89 said:Like it was at Silverstone...