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#1 |
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I wasn't that long ago that Hamilton and Vettel got a reprimand for how they raced down the pitlane. In yesterday's Canadian GP Hamilton and Alonso did the same thing and were punished with - nothing. So what does a reprimand mean?
With short tyre change-only pitstops like this, surely it's only a matter of time before there's a bad accident in the pitlane. The stewards and /or rulemakers really need to look at this potential accident. |
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#2 |
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#3 |
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#5 |
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#6 |
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If anything, its the teams fault for releasing him into Alonso's path, I'd imagine they would have been on the radio immediately telling him to yield to Fernando which it looked like he did.. probably the reason for Lewis/McLaren evading punishment? |
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#7 |
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I agree, it was a dangerous release of MacLaren, they deserved at least a reprimand. But as it was the mighty Lewis there was no reason. |
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#8 |
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dangerous release by mclaren again....though like in china, it looked so close that I'm not convinced they could've done much about it (almost simultaneous again.) they need to make their pit stops faster though, too many slow ones this season.
after that Lewis didn't have the length of pitlane like in china to yield without going ridiculously slow, and this time the driver he was up against (alonso) wasn't pushing him or doing anything stupid that I could see, unfortunate incident but they both did the best they could and no one was hurt. having said this, if we put mclaren at the end of the pitlane it wouldn't be such a problem. |
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#9 |
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#10 |
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dangerous release by mclaren again....though like in china, it looked so close that I'm not convinced they could've done much about it (almost simultaneous again.) they need to make their pit stops faster though, too many slow ones this season. The problem is that Lewis seems to get a bit of wheelspin on release which is costing him ground. Alonso was released fractionally ahead but not in the fast lane so McLaren were correct to release. Hamilton and Alonso both drove sensibly and no danger with Hamilton yielding the place to Fernando as he needed to. See, if you don't have Vettel moving over like he has in a couple of GP, then there's no danger and no problem. I've always been a fan of the young German but more and more he's becoming the new Schumacher for all the wrong reasons. |
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#11 |
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Good points. |
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#13 |
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Good points. |
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#14 |
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#15 |
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I have no problem with some inconsistency here. Why does it bother you that FIA quit handing out fake penalties? |
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#16 |
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When watching a race, it's good to have guidelines (i.e. rules) at least for calling judgement when an incident like this occurs. If there is no clarification of this rule, are all teams just supposed to release their cars ASAP, paying no heed to other cars in the pitlane? I think not! It's potential accidents we're talking about here. And, first take pole with so little fuel that he have to stop the car right there, then one moore of thoose pitlane squizze and brushes who is Lewis signum. Not a fine, reprimand or penalty for Lewis. |
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#17 |
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#18 |
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When watching a race, it's good to have guidelines (i.e. rules) at least for calling judgement when an incident like this occurs. If there is no clarification of this rule, are all teams just supposed to release their cars ASAP, paying no heed to other cars in the pitlane? I think not! It's potential accidents we're talking about here. |
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#19 |
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need to require the car enterring the pitlane to yield right of way to car already in pitlane who is in front or coming along side. To yield, the car must immediately permit the other car to go in front and move behind him
This stuff is just asking for an accident into a slew of pitworkers, with tragic results Penalty should be automatic stop and go. MS passes FA on a race track, within the rules PENALTY, when there was no safetfy concern or even broken rule. and hamilton once again tries to race with someone down pitlane.....stupid is as stupid does; in this case(s), the only thing dumber is the FIA |
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#20 |
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My point was they should not pretend their doing something about it. Either give them real penalties or let them be. The other point is that I think they are risking too much by allowing this in the pitlane. Basically, the drivers can get away with doing things in the pitlane that they wouldn't be able to do under a yellow flag. In this particular case, I don't think McLaren could have avoided the situation as the reaction time is so short, and both drivers were thankfully challenging in a fair and safe way, but imagine the same thing with any combination of Schumacher, Vettel and Kobayashi. |
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