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21 Oct 2024, 05:16 (Ref:4231806) | #51 | ||
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While one may laugh and look down upon the track limit regulations in IndyCar and NASCAR, it would appear, at least at COTA they get it right - no argument, no doubt, no inconsistencies, and perhaps most importantly, the spectator is not left dazed and confused by calls that require an intimate knowledge of the sporting regulations to understand.
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21 Oct 2024, 05:37 (Ref:4231807) | #52 | |||
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All interpretations by the stewards are legalistic by nature, so we get what we get. I think that the racing rules could be much better than they are and also circuits designed better would assist. |
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21 Oct 2024, 07:09 (Ref:4231809) | #53 | |||
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21 Oct 2024, 07:17 (Ref:4231810) | #54 | |||
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21 Oct 2024, 07:21 (Ref:4231811) | #55 | |||
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I understand that but I would still not have made the decision that they did. |
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21 Oct 2024, 07:40 (Ref:4231812) | #56 | |||
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21 Oct 2024, 07:57 (Ref:4231813) | #57 | |
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Well, few years ago I criticized the "first to apex" rule precisely for this reason, but few people here seemed to agree back then.
I think that the above point is correct that the car on the inside for to have the right of corner should at least remain on track themselves otherwise you will forfeit your right to the corner. If the rule would've been worded as such then Norris should not have gotten a penalty. Problem is, AFAIK, this additional criterion is not currently in the rules and don't force (or allow?) the stewards to judge accordingly. Earlier I also proposed the rule that overtaking outside the track is only disallowed if the inside car leaves enough space on the outside. As Verstappen didn't even stay on track such a rule would have surely kicked in. Yet again, such a rule does not exist. So I think the penalty was not wrong, just that the rules should've been such that it would not have been given. For a few years I've been arguing for rules that promote side by side racing rather then "right of corner" style rules, but as said, the enthusiasm for it was not that great here. I rather have slightly shorter DRS zones and rules that provide opportunities in corners by promoting side by side fights throughout corners. Question is, can the driver (and their fans) handle it as it goes against their DNA. |
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21 Oct 2024, 08:20 (Ref:4231814) | #58 | ||
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Max breaks the regulations by making sure he's at the apex first by braking so late that he will beat any car to the apex and force them off the road. It's not only unacceptable driving, it's premeditated. He knows going into the corner that he's taking them off the road. Or let's put it this way - George Russell was apparently penalized for forcing another car off the track and gaining an advantage (he took the position). Yuki Tusnoda was apparently penalized for forcing another car off the track and gaining an advantage (he took the position). Oscar Pisati was apparently penalized for forcing another car off the track and gaining an advantage (he took the position). All 3 of these drivers were apparently penalized because their actions of forcing another car off the track allowed them to come out on top. I don't agree with any of the decisions, but that's the logic they're using. You tend to penalize cars for when they gain an advantage right? And this is to right the wrong of what occurred. Max drove another car off the circuit. That is the wrong. The wrong was immediately righted by Lando taking the position anyway. So surely this is just a NFA situation? Everyone is obsessed with the "overtaking off the track" which Lando did, but we're going to keep excusing why they were off the track in the first place - car number 1 put them there. These sort of driving and officiating standards would not be acceptable in a regional Formula 4 event. Yet here we are, again, at a Formula 1 Grand Prix, discussing why it's acceptable for Max to drive in a manner which would have him banned from British F4. |
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21 Oct 2024, 08:38 (Ref:4231827) | #59 | |
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I looked up one of the previous discussions:
https://tentenths.com/forum/showthre...154427&page=21 With the proposed rule change in post #509. During a fight for position a driver may maintain or gain position by going off track if not left at least a car width on the outside on track by the competing driver. Also in post #518 of that thread we read: These are the current rules in regards to leaving room as commuted to the drivers: https://the-race.com/formula-1/the-r...-aggressively/ At the start of this year the FIA said if a driver is overtaking on the inside of a corner, they must “have a significant portion of the car alongside” to be given space. There are “various factors” that will determine what it is a “significant portion” but one that is specified is whether their front tyres are alongside the other car by “no later than the apex of the corner”. The car overtaking on the inside must also “clearly remain within the limits of the track” – but nothing is specified for the car being overtaken. As for overtaking on the outside of a corner, once again the driver attempting the move must have a “significant portion” of their car alongside. In this scenario, though, the stewards will consider if the overtaking car is “ahead of the other car from the apex of the corner”. And in this case, both cars must be able to make the corner while remaining “within the limits of the track”. I highlighted the important bit. So It seems that if this is still currently in the rules and we know Verstappen did not stay within track limits the penalty should not have been given even by the current rules. |
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21 Oct 2024, 08:46 (Ref:4231828) | #60 | ||
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Also consider the wording here. The car making the pass must be significantly alongside "no later than the apex of the corner" - it does not say at the apex (which is what is continuously posted in defense). Lando was a nose ahead into the braking which is before the apex. By this wording, he is entitled to space on the exit of the corner. It's easy to blame Max for all of this, but he is being enabled by poor officiating. If he was penalized then it would stop. |
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21 Oct 2024, 09:07 (Ref:4231831) | #61 | ||
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I'm not sure this particular bit is correct. I think the wording can only be interpreted as you have up until the apex to get ahead. Which Max did. I don't agree with that rule as it does not promote side by side racing, but I do feel that bit was applied correctly. Does not seem to matter though as Max went off track and the highlighted bit above should've kicked in. |
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21 Oct 2024, 10:13 (Ref:4231842) | #62 | ||
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If a bank tells me "Pay no later than August 6th", then I can pay at any point before August 6th. If the rules say "no later than the apex", then it's any point before, up until, the apex. I also agree with your last point - the rules were still violated a second or so later anyway. |
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21 Oct 2024, 10:18 (Ref:4231843) | #63 | ||
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The track is partly to blame. When you have drivers forcing other drivers off the track, they know that 9 times out of 10, the guy on the outside will just relent and take to the run off area. If that run off didn't exist, then you probably wouldn't have them going "shoulder to shoulder" on the exit kerb in the first place because the guy on the outside would have anticipated it and given up the corner way before.
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21 Oct 2024, 10:20 (Ref:4231844) | #64 | ||
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The Stewards have interpreted this matter, as has been stated above somewhere, from the point of view that at the apex" Verstappen had his nose in front. They totally ignored, and possibly didn't look at his previous braking point which other Stewards have done in previous races, the fact that Verstappen was unable to make the corner on the track because he was carrying far too much speed.
It does seem to me that various Stewards, for reasons that are not totally clear to me, appear to not adjudicate Verstappen's on track , or maybe that should be off track, movements in the same way that they do for other drivers. Maybe they fear the wrath of all those that surround Red Bull. |
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21 Oct 2024, 13:31 (Ref:4231856) | #65 | ||
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Great summary as well. He is great at using the situation to his advantage, like Schumacher always did. Permanent stewards and gravel outside these corners, simple as that. |
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21 Oct 2024, 13:42 (Ref:4231857) | #66 | ||
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Richard |
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21 Oct 2024, 14:20 (Ref:4231860) | #67 | |||||
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Be that as it may, as the current rules apply, the stewards got it right in the Lando/Max incident it would seem. |
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21 Oct 2024, 14:31 (Ref:4231862) | #68 | |||
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I find that difficult to agree to as the Stewards failed to take into account or ignored the fact that Verstappen, having braked so late to stop Norris getting past, would never have been able to take the corner and still remain on track. It's all too easy to fail to brake early enough so that your nose is in front at the apex, but you should still be able negotiate that corner whilst staying within excepted limits. But Verstappen doesn't, and yet he gets away with it, apparently repeatedly. |
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21 Oct 2024, 15:00 (Ref:4231865) | #69 | |||
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If Lando had eased back in behind Max as they rejoined the track, there'd have been no penalty at all. |
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21 Oct 2024, 15:17 (Ref:4231866) | #70 | ||
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given that the rules are convoluted, intentionally at that imo, then the stewards should very much be able to account for other factors like trying to determine whether one or both drivers were actually trying to make the corner.
honestly tho i dont know how much of a difference that would have made...you can change the rules, reprofile corners with gravel or strips of grass etc but that doesnt mean Max/RB wont continue to work the rules to his maximum advantage. he's just that good at this aspect of racecraft. maybe its mentality or experience but he knows the rules book, knows where he can push it, knows the track layouts, knows what to say on the radio, knows his opponent which means he can effect outcomes with far more ability than Norris or anyone else on the Mclaren pitwall. whether its Norris' starts, his often clumsy attempts to dive bomb pass Max, the teams inability to wrap their heads around team orders or Lando's seemingly public unwillingness to demand that for himself, an early season belief that Lando didnt have a chance to win this years drivers...for some reason Mclaren (other than Zak Brown who is getting quite good at throwing several different types of smoke i must say) dont seem able to play this game on the same level as RB hence why they always look the victim and never the bully (aggressor)? harsh take i suppose. i should add that im not a fan of Max' driving style but i saw this as more of a Lando/Mclaren problem rather than a Max/RB or refereeing problem. |
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21 Oct 2024, 15:23 (Ref:4231868) | #71 | |||
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Yes, I read the Stewards' adjudication prior to posting about this; they take into consideration that Verstappen also exceeded track limits, bit they have ignored the fact that the only reason that he did was because he intentionally braked too late in order push Norris off the track. He didn't exceed track limits due to anything that Norris had done. I would agree that if Norris was on the inside that he would then have to ease back, but he wasn't; he was on the outside and it was the responsibility of Verstappen to leave him sufficient room to negotiate the corner in a safe manner. If there hadn't been a huge run-off there and instead there was a barrier/wall, Verstappen would never have attempted that move. And I think that Autosport appears to agree; that the rule was never altered to allow drivers such as Verstappen to use it to defend their position. See: https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/wh...peat/10665281/ |
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21 Oct 2024, 15:33 (Ref:4231870) | #72 | ||
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21 Oct 2024, 15:38 (Ref:4231871) | #73 | ||
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another question...apologies if its been asked and answered already.
but didnt Norris also break really late for that corner? for sure it was in an attempt to overtake but given his line and speed, how effectively would he have been able to handle that corner even had their been room? or rather by also breaking late did that negate Max also having braked late into that corner? |
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21 Oct 2024, 15:45 (Ref:4231872) | #74 | |||
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In answer to your first question, the Autosport article quotes Stella, saying that they deliberately didn't tell Norris to give the place back because he believed that it wouldn't have been referred to the Stewards because of anything that Norris did. So when they were advised that the Stewards were investigating, they assumed that it was Verstappen's move that was the subject of the investigation. And as I don't believe the telemetry of either cars at that point have been published or discussed by the Stewards, do we even know that Norris braked too late to manage to negotiate the corner without exceeding track limits? |
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21 Oct 2024, 15:58 (Ref:4231876) | #75 | ||
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Here it is again at 0.44 sec. with Croft at full throttle.
https://youtu.be/i6TyRf8d7hM?si=SrfE94uexTluDeY0 |
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