It was first round, not always penalties are given.search wrote: ↑19 Nov 2023, 14:48he (or the team) probably had the choice to give back the position though, didn't they?
We've seen teams taking a penalty instead before, because a pass is usually worth more than 5s. It's probably something to have a look into in the off season, and maybe increase the penalty to 10s.
If another driver had done what Hamilton did today, we wouldn't hear the end of it. How it was deliberate. Retaliation, childish blah blah blah.
The data tells what the LasVegasGP also showed live. Ferrari had a pace close to RedBull . Clearly stronger on the medium tyre, just see how much Leclerc was able to extend the first stint with a great pace, the SF23 was then a couple of tenths slower on the hard tyre (only compared to Verstappen), but with a set that had 5 more laps and above all a heavy additional thermal cycle taken with the SC to be disposed of. Without the SC Charles would have had a real chance of victory, not easy but definitely possible. The weakness of Perez can also be seen by the fact that he had the race in his grasp, on equal terms with Max, and ended up P3.
The peculiarities of the conditions and track make it impossible to take these values and apply them to anything in the future, but the weekend execution of the Vasseur era continues to be good and solid. The strength of the RB19 can be inferred from the fact that it is the performance reference on every track, battling with different opponents who switch from time to time depending on who prefers the various characteristics of the tracks. In that sense, it is hard to imagine a better track for Ferrari than Las Vegas. In Abu Dhabi the battle for P2 in the WCC will be wide open
No idea really. I'm just curious because Verstappen received 2 penalty points for pushing Leclerc off the track. Fair enough, it was a misjudgment and it wouldn't be fair to let him get away with it.
This! I was at Zandvoort this year, and it was such a huge dissapointment. Other than the cars on track it had nothing, literally nothing to do with racing. There was much more focus on the music than racing, making it to hard experience what was actually happening. No info from the pit, no info from the teams. Whenever there was flag, some idiot music on the screen instead of what was going on or some other general racing info.
It wasn't that good. Perez didn't beat Leclerc, nor Verstappen for that matter. Once in the lead, Perez was unable to extend the margin to take a victory.
He didn't though. Charles would be well placed to carefully consider Red Bull Racing's contract offer for 2025 (if one exists) instead of extending with Scuderia Ferrari (unless he has already extended for some reason).
You also don't want to turn it into a penalty fest and discourage risk taking too much. Hard to find the balance. But Verstappen got a clear advantage, no matter if it was intentional or not, and the others did not. So I think the stewards got it right.AR3-GP wrote: ↑19 Nov 2023, 16:18No idea really. I'm just curious because Verstappen received 2 penalty points for pushing Leclerc off the track. Fair enough, it was a misjudgment and it wouldn't be fair to let him get away with it.
Hamilton forced Russell out of the track in Japan in the exact same way with his own car fully outside the track limits as he pushed Russell off. Hamilton was not investigated, received no time penalty and received no penalty points.
Sainz actually crashed into someone and received no penalty points.
What is the purpose of the penalty points?
I looked at those photos few times, it's not the same corner. This shithole of a track looks the same everywhere, I can understand why you didn't spot the difference , it's really easy to get confused. Otherwise, I agree with the rest.
Man, Sainz literally gained a podium position, by pushing Leclerc off track, cutting the T4 chicane completely at Monza and going with all 4 wheels off track himself. How many penalty points did he get, any Ideas? I'll tell you. zero! He didn't get any penalty whatsoever, he wasn't told to give the position back. But some silly people go as far even, as saying stewards are too lenient towards Max. This is ridiculous, honestly.AR3-GP wrote: ↑19 Nov 2023, 16:18No idea really. I'm just curious because Verstappen received 2 penalty points for pushing Leclerc off the track. Fair enough, it was a misjudgment and it wouldn't be fair to let him get away with it.
Hamilton forced Russell out of the track in Japan in the exact same way with his own car fully outside the track limits as he pushed Russell off. Hamilton was not investigated, received no time penalty and received no penalty points.
Sainz actually crashed into someone and received no penalty points.
What is the purpose of the penalty points?
JordanMugen wrote: ↑19 Nov 2023, 17:32It wasn't that good. Perez didn't beat Leclerc, nor Verstappen for that matter. Once in the lead, Perez was unable to extend the margin to take a victory.
He didn't though. Charles would be well placed to carefully consider Red Bull Racing's contract offer for 2025 (if one exists) instead of extending with Scuderia Ferrari (unless he has already extended for some reason).