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22 Oct 2024, 15:19 (Ref:4232006) | #101 | |||
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revisiting the Austrian GP incident this year...a bit of a dive bomb by Norris but Max also moved under braking/forced Norris wide and created contact and as a result took the penalty for it. did either driver learn anything from that? Max still drives like a bully and Norris continues to leave himself hanging on the outside when he doesn't have to. i assume out of frustration because he would have taken Max on the next DRS straight. i would argue that the best way to fight Max/bully in this situation would have been to use the brain a bit more? |
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22 Oct 2024, 15:31 (Ref:4232008) | #102 | |
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Max penalty was ineffective because the damaged caused to Landos car cost Lando more than the penalty did Max. Of course Max didn't learn anything from that - he extended his championship lead.
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22 Oct 2024, 15:52 (Ref:4232010) | #103 | ||||
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so i challenge the assertion that a 'higher standard' set of rules would have afforded Norris more room for that corner. imo he was too late to that corner. certainly too late to use this as an example of improving the rules. Quote:
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22 Oct 2024, 16:04 (Ref:4232011) | #104 | |||
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The rules should not allow you to defend your position by taking a line which means neither car can make the corner. Quote:
And yes - if every time Max is forced to go wheel to wheel, we either have a crash, or a penalty applied in a manner which causes the main talking point to be the incident, then it is absolutely a metric for change as it proves the rule is not fit for purpose. And regarding the standards - once again - if a French F4 driver drove another car off the circuit, they would be criticized and penalized. Yet here we are, discussing yet another Formula 1 Grand Prix, the supposedly highest standard of motor racing in the entire world, debating on if running cars off the road is acceptable, and who should or should not be penalized in a now semi-regular occurrence, because of the exact wording of a rule book, and the outcome from a steward who has not driven a race car in almost 3 decades. |
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22 Oct 2024, 17:57 (Ref:4232020) | #105 | ||
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You can only punish the action, not the consequence. Don't forget at Austria both cars had punctures for a small amount of contact. Verstappen was rightly punished for the contact, but the consequence was out of his hands. It was pure bad luck that Norris had to retire. |
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22 Oct 2024, 19:20 (Ref:4232026) | #106 | |||
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- The FIA has never punished the action and not consequence, at any point in its history. It'd be great if it did. - The consequences of Max's actions were completely in his hands. He drove into another car. - Luck was not the cause of Norris retirement. Being driven into by Max was. |
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22 Oct 2024, 19:32 (Ref:4232027) | #107 | ||
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imo the Austria incident is a far better example upon which to justify amending the rules of engagement as you suggest than the Austin incident.
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22 Oct 2024, 21:18 (Ref:4232032) | #108 | |||
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It is in the interpretation of the rules and the mindset in which they are interpreted and enforced. There is enough provision in the rules as they stand to deal effectively with the situations we saw on Sunday. It is the mindset under which some people are operating that creates the problems. When outsiders like fans/supporters/forums get involved in debating the wording they are being quite legalistic about the wording. But the wording will not change the mindset of the judges (stewards) who will still try to enforce the ruleset in a legalistic manner. |
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23 Oct 2024, 00:59 (Ref:4232036) | #109 | |||
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Apologies for the long remainder of this post as I wanted to post what I think is the pertinent rules here. This comes from "CHAPTER IV - CODE OF DRIVING CONDUCT ON CIRCUITS" of "International Sporting Code: Appendix L - International Driver’s licenses, medical examinations, driver’s equipment and conduct". I left out sections 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6 as those cover signals, and dealing with stopped cars, pit entry and exit. There are also sections in the regular sporting regulations that govern things like how to perform starts, various flavors of safety car period, red flags, media commitments, etc. All of those are not relevant to this topic. Quote:
I am not going to argue that Lando's pass should have been legal, but I think much of the driving style that Max is being called out for is explicitly called out here (2.b - pushing other cars off track and 2.c - lasting advantage gained and even 2.d for grievous examples) for being referred to the stewards. And I think there is little room for the stewards to not penalize. I think the stewards are using a set of guidelines that may not actually fully follow the rules or intent set by the rules for the stewards to act when appropriate. The "let them race" stance can't be extended into infinity in such as way that blatant and likely unsporting like actions are ignored and/or repeatedly allowed. Richard |
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23 Oct 2024, 02:53 (Ref:4232039) | #110 | |||
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I understand what you and Teretonga mean about the stewards taking a legalistic approach to making decisions generally, including on driving standards but to me, that's what stewards always do. The vast majority of them that I've dealt with over the years have in fact been lawyers. Bear in mind that many of their decisions can be subject to appeal, and in that environment, it is only natural that they'd take a more legalistic view. |
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23 Oct 2024, 03:00 (Ref:4232040) | #111 | |||
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Poor decisions are always poor descensions, and time doesn't change their flavor. |
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23 Oct 2024, 03:17 (Ref:4232041) | #112 | |||
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I just can't see the way stewards doing what they do ever changing - has been the same for as long as I've been around or in the sport, and that's been 50 odd years at this stage (bloody hell, scary to type that - I must be getting "old"). |
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23 Oct 2024, 03:47 (Ref:4232042) | #113 | |||
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With that lead, I was able to find that a prior version was published in 2022 and, as you say, a newer version exists. This article talks about the 2024 update to be included in 2025 ISC. https://www.fia.com/news/fia-drivers...-championships I broadly assume this is the draft you mention. I also broadly assume it is not in use and that the 2022 guidelines are what are in use today in F1 (layered on top of the 2024 ISC) and that everyone else is just using the 2024 ISC. Lets look at the 2022 document https://www.fia.com/sites/default/fi...guidelines.pdf I will copy-n-paste some content here to help people along as the FIA site has been painfully slow for me today including sometimes failing to load. The document is very small and clearly meant to be a clarification against what is current in the ISC document (which is pretty vague). The document is short and worth reading as it hits a few items. Anyhow, below is the content pertaining to overtaking on the outside... Quote:
1. Positioning the overtaking car a "significant portion" alongside seems to be fully a responsibility of the overtaking car. 2. The overtaking car must be capable of making the corner. That sounds logical right? But... there is nothing that says the defending car must be able to make the corner. Therefore the defending car can always effectively prevent the overtaking car from being appropriately alongside by mirroring the overtaking cars depth into the corner and relative position. This can be done even to the point of going off the circuit. If done right, this should prevent any outside passing. Edit: Ugh, actually it DOES require the defending car to be capable of remaining on the circuit. So I don't know what the stewards were thinking. Regardless, smarter and more experienced people than myself could work out the appropriate way to address this. I think the 2022 guidelines above clearly don't cover all necessary situation. And I wonder if the 2024 work does or not. Richard Last edited by Richard C; 23 Oct 2024 at 03:55. |
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23 Oct 2024, 04:56 (Ref:4232044) | #114 | ||
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I sincerely believe at this moment that Verstapen should be slammed against the wall like Hamilton did in Silverstone 2021, to lower his arrogance, I suppose Norris would never do this but I would sincerely love him to do it!!!!
excuse me for my bad english.... |
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23 Oct 2024, 07:38 (Ref:4232047) | #115 | |||
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There is no reason to have what we are currently experiencing. It can all be done much better than this and to an equally robust or higher level of outcome and performance if the right people are in charge of it. |
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23 Oct 2024, 08:31 (Ref:4232049) | #116 | |||
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I believe that this part, in particular, is why the McLaren pitwall team felt that it was totally unnecessary to tell Norris that he needed to hand the place back. |
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23 Oct 2024, 08:38 (Ref:4232050) | #117 | |
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Taking a very very broad look at the current problem, as it stands, it may be with referring to Rugby Union's TMO (television match official).
In all top level sport now there are infinite amounts of infinitesimally detailed data/telemetry, endless slow motion/close up/even 3D video feeds, all of which can allow incredibly close analysis of an incident or event. This is all great, except it removes something from the analysis - the humans involved. Going back to the TMO, they may ask or be asked to look into a collision between two players but they always, *always* run it in real speed from multiple angles alongside the slow mo detail. That gives them a far better impression of intent, mitigation and outcome than just looking at the small detail. Maybe we've simply got too much data being presented? It should be easy to look at a piece of TV footage and decide that a driver was playing silly beggars. Brake traces etc aren't always relevant. And yes, I have some small experience of stewarding (rather than marshalling) at UK club championship level, where we don't have instant access to all the data in the universe. |
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23 Oct 2024, 11:47 (Ref:4232060) | #118 | |||
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23 Oct 2024, 13:25 (Ref:4232068) | #119 | ||
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He was.
My view of this incident is to compare it with lots of incidents where both cars run off track onto the grass. In that instance, they rejoin the track and continue in whatever order they got back on. The only difference here is it's not grass. Had Max been able to stay on track, then Norris may not overtake whilst off track. If both cars are off track then they continue in the order they rejoined, and Lando rejoined first probably because he was actually in control and Max was lairing it up the inside because he only needed to stop Lando overtaking. And then comparing to Austria before the collision when Max had a problem with Lando chucking it up the inside and unable to stop. In the end the two things I dislike in this are inconsistency and hypocrasy. |
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23 Oct 2024, 13:47 (Ref:4232070) | #120 | |||
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Sorry to be so blunt and accept that English is not your first language but desire for violence / injury and death threats from Argentinian "fans" of Indycar driver Agustin Canapino were roundly condemned and what you have said here also should be condemned - I'm happy to be the first (or maybe only) person to do so. Unacceptable. |
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23 Oct 2024, 14:09 (Ref:4232074) | #121 | ||
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Villeneuve vs Arnoux at Dijon 1979 should be the golden standard.
Each driver should give room to any car on their sides, no matter who overtakes whom. |
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23 Oct 2024, 14:59 (Ref:4232078) | #122 | ||
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while i dont disagree about the philosophy of leaving room, i do question what the lead/defending driver is supposed to do when the overtaker also late brakes into a corner at the end of a DRS zone? is the defender meant to break earlier, slow down more, take a tighter line in order to facilitate being passed for position?
of course if Max is the defender it seems obvious what the principle should be (the opposite of what Max is currently doing) but if you take Max out of the equation does the need for a rule change/clarification logic remain? my thoughts on this started with my first impression that Lando was overly aggressive but as this convo evolves i find myself more interested in the nature of DRS and how this might be a contributing factor into relative speed differences/closing distances as two cars approach a corner....rather does DRS actually encourage/require aggressive defense by the lead driver because the overtaking driver can start their attack from further back and thus also claim fair space into a corner? and not just because of DRS but also as a function of modern track design? |
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23 Oct 2024, 15:40 (Ref:4232083) | #123 | ||
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You mean in order to facilitate staying on the race track and not having an accident? Yes. That is exactly what they are supposed to do. Otherwise we have a situation where no overtake can ever happen because the defender can just run everyone off the road and/or cause an accident. What is the defender supposed to do? Stay on the race track and not drive into the car beside him. If that means they lose the position then we're describing almost every overtake to happen since the second car was built and two people decided to race them. |
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23 Oct 2024, 18:58 (Ref:4232088) | #124 | ||
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i dont want to keep on repeating myself and sorry for making you repeat yourself, but IMO Lando went into that corner hot and to me that doesn't entitle him to space or that corner....i suppose this view point is making all other considerations/larger concern points moot to me on this?
so for sure im getting the sense that i am very much in the wrong here...might be time to add a poll to let everyone vote on just how far off the plot i am on this one? |
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23 Oct 2024, 20:08 (Ref:4232090) | #125 | |||
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Norris may have gone in hot, but how do we, sitting behind keyboards, know that he couldn't have actually made the corner. Or, maybe he guessed, correctly as it turned out, that Verstappen would also overcook it and not be able to make the corner, i.e. exceed track limits on the exit. He may have also known the driving standards protocol that should have meant that he didn't gain an unfair advantage because Verstappen would, like him, exceed the track limits. Which is what the McLaren pitwall team believed. But then the Stewards decided to interpret the protocol in a way that it wasn't written to mean. |
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