Sorry, little bit late for me - I am quite opposite to German in a waymarcush. wrote:I was joking there mate ...germans are a bit lousy with humour you know...

Sorry, little bit late for me - I am quite opposite to German in a waymarcush. wrote:I was joking there mate ...germans are a bit lousy with humour you know...
andrew wrote:Ah yes, the ledgendary German sense of humour!![]()
At least it stayed dry for the race.
Hmm, a bit of a conspiracy theory, but I tend to agree. Considering Red Bull did a similar thing in a previous race (well Webber and Vettel crashed, but that's because Vettel is an @$$ and chopped the line), why would Ferrari screw this up (the appearances) so badly?WhiteBlue wrote:Both Smedley and Massa did everything they could to get Ferrari into trouble for this team order advantaging Alonso. Smedley could not have been any more obvious in his radio calls and Massa also made the deliberate slow down obvious.
To me this indicates that they were both royally pissed off and wanted to demonstrate that to the world. Still if Massa eventually gives testimony that he agreed with swapping race positions Ferrari may get away with it. The whole thing is very political and difficult to predict.
What you say about Hamilton seems a fair assessment, but I sure would like it put to the test one day.ringo wrote:I want them to keep the points. They had too many bad weekends.Ganxxta wrote:So you think its Massas fault?WhiteBlue wrote:Both Smedley and Massa did everything they could to get Ferrari into trouble for this team order advantaging Alonso. Smedley could not have been any more obvious in his radio calls and Massa also made the deliberate slow down obvious.
To me this indicates that they were both royally pissed off and wanted to demonstrate that to the world. Still if Massa eventually gives testimony that he agreed with swapping race positions Ferrari may get away with it. The whole thing is very political and difficult to predict.![]()
Well great race and really great job by Massa, he deserved to win.
To say "You saw it, there is nothing more to say" is so clear that it wasn't his idea to let Alonso pass in his own free will.
Well i hope Ferrari will at least lose their Championship points of this race.
If only Massa just came first i would be more happy about the ferrari turn around.
But it's one thing i rate about Hamilton, he wouldn't take that place. He would rather fight for it.
Alonso should have radioed in and signal them "no Massa is faster", to keep the race going.
Last week he said he wants to win on his own merit; now he goes back on his word.
Well if it was on purpose, than both of them, Massa and Smedley have no future at Ferrari, Massa should look for a new contract for next year and cancel his Ferrari one. Go to Renault instead of Petrov or Kubica(to Ferrari, if Kubica wants to be Nr.2) would be an option. I'm sure Kubica would have no problem to fight with his teammate and not to whine when he is behind Massa.Goran2812 wrote:Smedley and Massa had that talk on purpose... That tone of voice from Rob,those words, were used just for one thing... To bring Ferrari trouble and for everyone to hear...
And all of this crap from Domenicali and Massa and Alonso only buries them deeper...
komninosm wrote: What you say about Hamilton seems a fair assessment, but I sure would like it put to the test one day.
Vettel once again had a problem to get off the line cleanly and was passed by both Ferraris. I fail to see how that was any different to a botched start by jumping the lights. Jumping a start is even more of a mistake in my view as it is not a problem with the equipment but a totally unforced error by the driver.ringo wrote:Alonso's mistakes were not necessarily racing mistakes. He doesn't usually set a foot wrong when defending or attacking. His last mistakes were regulations based such as jump starting or passing off track.
While Vettel's have all been car control mistakes. We have seen these in silverstone, turkey; this year and last, and generally he's not proven to be a guy that can defend under pressure for many laps. He's been too fast lately to be in that situation, but now we get to see it, ie if all goes well for him and alonso in the first lap.
The better or faster man wont necessarily win. The man who blinks first under the pressure will lose.
We have Vettel, Alonso, Massa, Webber, Button, Hamilton, all in competitive cars, that's a lot of tension form such a short lap around, factor in back markers and things get more interesting.
I predict Alonso outbraking Vettel into the hair pin on lap 3, Vettel coming over and touching, loses a little ground then has to defend from Webber who passed Massa on lap 2. Vettel under pressure for his Home GP.
What double penalty did Alonso get? Your bias is overflowing mate.Miguel wrote:It is not too early at all. And the sponsors wouldn't make more money of the reversed 1-2, but they would make more money if a Ferrari driver wins the championship. Lapped cars made Alonso lose a 2nd (and maybe even a 1st) in Canada, the safety car in Valencia costed him another 10-15 points, and the double penalty for a single offence in the UK a few others. Had Fernando been within 20 points to the WDC lead, you wouldn't have seen this. But 45 points behind with 9 races to go? Don't be naïve.thestig84 wrote:Disagree. How will sponsors make more money from a Alonso Massa 1-2 instead of the other way around?! Also you could argue that the sponsors did rather well after the Redbull turkey affair! It is too early to make this call, Massa was only 8 old style points behind before today.NormanBates wrote:I think team rules should be allowed.
First, because they make sense: from sponsors to teams, everybody is here to make as much money as they can. Leaving money in the table would be silly. Letting your drivers fight each other and risk getting them both to not finish would be downright dumb.
BTW: This is Grandprix' race review of Canada 2008, for those interested:
http://www.grandprix.com/gpe/rr792.html