why do have to bring is mother into it !!!!!!!!!!
hamilton fucked up yet again accept it and stop insulting people and there families
hamilton fucked up yet again accept it and stop insulting people and there families
BBC Sport said that, so I'm guessing that Lewis swerved out of Kimi's way to avoid a collision. But I really doubt that Lewis will get this title back.Hamilton darted around the outside, both drivers locked up their brakes on entry, and Hamilton took evasive action by using a run-off area to his left.
Stewards need to go to Specsavers.The young Briton appeared to do so, with Raikkonen crossing the start-finish line narrowly ahead, before Hamilton promptly filed in behind.
Last edited by kptk92 (2008-09-07 13:48:21)
I thought it was because he cut the chicane?Jenspm wrote:
Snake - afaik, he wasn't punished for the trip to the escape lane, but because he didn't give the lead back properly. When I saw it live, I though, "wtf, that's not enough". I mean, he gave him almost nothing before rushing up and beating him to the corner. IMO, he should've given Raikkonen that first corner, and then continued to race normaly.
Last edited by Snake (2008-09-07 13:58:16)
QFTQFTQFTQFTQFTSnake wrote:
Further more, Hamilton let Kimi past on the straight right afterwards, showing that he knew he had to give the lead back: and he did. I see no problem with that. At all. To top things off, just watched that (better) video provided by kp...Kimi actually hit the back of Hamilton on the corner following being overtaken. Shouldnt Kimi be penalised? Oh wait.
Snake wrote:
I thought it was because he cut the chicane?Jenspm wrote:
Snake - afaik, he wasn't punished for the trip to the escape lane, but because he didn't give the lead back properly. When I saw it live, I though, "wtf, that's not enough". I mean, he gave him almost nothing before rushing up and beating him to the corner. IMO, he should've given Raikkonen that first corner, and then continued to race normaly.
Anyway...how much is enough? There is no definition of it. You cant penalise somebody depending upon your own interpretation of the rules (pointed @ the FIA).
He got forced off the track, got back onto the track in the lead and duly gave back the lead (rules/sportsmanship): why should he wait any longer to regain the lead? He had to slow down to let Kimi past, so Hammy must have out-accelerated the Ferrari to then catch him up.
Regardless, perhaps he didnt give enough time, perhaps he did. There is no doubt Hammy would still have passed him later on in the race, therefore making this whole issue utterly pointless. Well, except to determine the above I guess.
So ye, Lewis was behind on the start/finish line anyway. So really Lewis had given the position back.The young Briton appeared to do so, with Raikkonen crossing the start-finish line narrowly ahead, before Hamilton promptly filed in behind.
Last edited by kptk92 (2008-09-07 13:59:51)
seriously, that is no way to give the position back. Giving the position back should be to the next corner, not for a split second on the straight.kptk92 wrote:
QFTQFTQFTQFTQFTSnake wrote:
Further more, Hamilton let Kimi past on the straight right afterwards, showing that he knew he had to give the lead back: and he did. I see no problem with that. At all. To top things off, just watched that (better) video provided by kp...Kimi actually hit the back of Hamilton on the corner following being overtaken. Shouldnt Kimi be penalised? Oh wait.Snake wrote:
I thought it was because he cut the chicane?Jenspm wrote:
Snake - afaik, he wasn't punished for the trip to the escape lane, but because he didn't give the lead back properly. When I saw it live, I though, "wtf, that's not enough". I mean, he gave him almost nothing before rushing up and beating him to the corner. IMO, he should've given Raikkonen that first corner, and then continued to race normaly.
Anyway...how much is enough? There is no definition of it. You cant penalise somebody depending upon your own interpretation of the rules (pointed @ the FIA).
He got forced off the track, got back onto the track in the lead and duly gave back the lead (rules/sportsmanship): why should he wait any longer to regain the lead? He had to slow down to let Kimi past, so Hammy must have out-accelerated the Ferrari to then catch him up.
Regardless, perhaps he didnt give enough time, perhaps he did. There is no doubt Hammy would still have passed him later on in the race, therefore making this whole issue utterly pointless. Well, except to determine the above I guess.So ye, Lewis was behind on the start/finish line anyway. So really Lewis had given the position back.The young Briton appeared to do so, with Raikkonen crossing the start-finish line narrowly ahead, before Hamilton promptly filed in behind.
Well, in my opinion, in a race when a car overtakes another car on the same lap they gain one position. So when Raikonnen overtook Lewis coming out of the Bus Stop Chicane, he regained his position.Jenspm wrote:
seriously, that is no way to give the position back. Giving the position back should be to the next corner, not for a split second on the straight.kptk92 wrote:
QFTQFTQFTQFTQFTSnake wrote:
Further more, Hamilton let Kimi past on the straight right afterwards, showing that he knew he had to give the lead back: and he did. I see no problem with that. At all. To top things off, just watched that (better) video provided by kp...Kimi actually hit the back of Hamilton on the corner following being overtaken. Shouldnt Kimi be penalised? Oh wait.Snake wrote:
I thought it was because he cut the chicane?
Anyway...how much is enough? There is no definition of it. You cant penalise somebody depending upon your own interpretation of the rules (pointed @ the FIA).
He got forced off the track, got back onto the track in the lead and duly gave back the lead (rules/sportsmanship): why should he wait any longer to regain the lead? He had to slow down to let Kimi past, so Hammy must have out-accelerated the Ferrari to then catch him up.
Regardless, perhaps he didnt give enough time, perhaps he did. There is no doubt Hammy would still have passed him later on in the race, therefore making this whole issue utterly pointless. Well, except to determine the above I guess.So ye, Lewis was behind on the start/finish line anyway. So really Lewis had given the position back.The young Briton appeared to do so, with Raikkonen crossing the start-finish line narrowly ahead, before Hamilton promptly filed in behind.
Agreed. Hamilton was aggressive and paid the price. Sometimes it pays off. Sometimes it doesn't. I still feel for Hamilton though ... part of me thinks he should have won because of his driving on the last two laps..Jenspm wrote:
seriously, that is no way to give the position back. Giving the position back should be to the next corner, not for a split second on the straight.
Last edited by kylef (2008-09-07 14:11:59)
Yeah I saw that, it was a pretty harsh decision to revoke Lewis of his win.TC.Troy wrote:
A McLaren spokesperson declared: "We looked at all our data and also made it available to the FIA stewards. It showed that, having lifted, Lewis was 6km/h slower than Kimi as they crossed the start/finish line.
"Having passed the lead back to Kimi, Lewis repositioned his car, moving across and behind Kimi to the right-hand line and then outbraked him into the hairpin. Based on this data, we have no option other than to register our intention to appeal."
Having the telemetry, I cannot help but believe that it will confirm the error in judgement by the stewards at Spa. I can only hope the FIA are as willing to reconsider, as there were to strip the win.
Last edited by TC.Troy (2008-09-07 14:44:47)
Well yeah, I am all too familiar with that situation. I think personally that Stepneygate have much to do with the stewards view of Mclaren, thus they judge them accordingly. I may be WAY off the mark on this, but observation tells me otherwise.kptk92 wrote:
McLaren have had a poor past two years in general. The spy scandel last year kinda started it, then Alonso and Lewis' relationship crumbled. Then this year has also had its ups and downs.
He put in a excellent drive.... but anyone who cant bring the car to the finish shouldn't get anything.Zimmer wrote:
Hamilton got owneeeed.
Kimi should have gotten the race in the bag.
Last edited by VicktorVauhn (2008-09-09 02:09:42)