mep wrote:Look MS made a team order switch with no rule prohibiting it and in a fight for championship.
Punishment 1Million dollar and everybody calling him big cheat.
Alonso makes team order switch with a clear rule not allowing it. Furthermore he is not really fighting for championship.
Punishment: no punishment for Alonso, team pays 100.000 dollar but probably gets the money back with got CS position in the end of the year.
MS and Ferrari were punished for bringing the sport into disrepute, which they undoubtedly did. Through their cynical and unnecessary actions they were booed by the public - a result that brings the sport into disrepute.
The FIA are not yet done punishing Alonso, should he get away with just the current fine then I will agree with you on this point as they were in material breach of the rules. However we should wait and see what happens.
mep wrote:MS mad a super overtaking move against Alonso in Monaco. The rule was unclear and mistakes where made by FIA/race control.
Punishment: All points taken away and everybody calling him big cheat.
I agree this one was too harsh, they should have just swapped the positions back as the FIA were in breach of their own rules with the signals used.
mep wrote:MS stops in Monaco to avoid crashing into the barriers. There is no evidence or prove that it was done on purpose. There is no rule covering such a incident and deleting his fastest lap would be enough to give the advantage back to the other drivers.
Punishment: All lap times deleted -starting at the back of the field on a track like Monaco and really every idiot calls him biggest cheat ever.
Fully deserved on this one. The telemetry showed the MS pushed the brake pedal, from memory, two or three times harder than at any other point in the weekend at that point causing a deliberate lock up. It was clumsy and stupid and not at all becoming of one of the best drivers of all time.
mep wrote:MS crashes into JV to protect his CS on the last race of the season like it has been done several times before by other people without any trouble.
Punisment: All points of the year taken away and called cheat.
Times change, and people were already upset with him for him pulling the same stunt on Hill three years before. With Senna and Prost being the other two to decide championships in this way there was at least a feeling that the two balanced it out winning one apiece - there was also no blatant swerve. That last point may be harsh on Schumacher as there is no doubt of the intentions in the previous incidents, but the swerve in both 94 and 97 graphically showed the intent to the public. It didn't help that it was MS in both circumstances pulling the same stunt on different drivers, rather than a single rivalry with the blows heading both ways.
mep wrote:Alonso blackmailed his team McLaren Mercedes. Proved by the quotes of Ron Denis. This is not just a race incident but also a criminal act in civil live.
Punishment: none for Alonso.
This single incident is, for me, worse than anything Schumacher ever did. At least you can attribute most of Schumachers incidents to split second, heat of the moment incidents and merely a will to win rather than malicious intent. Alonso's act was both malicious and premeditated.
mep wrote:Alonso asks his team-mate Pique to crash his car on purpose. Its quite possible that he blackmailed his team again with his contract and the Sponsors.
Punishment: no punishment for Alonso (he even can keep his points), Piques career is over, Briatore gets livelong ban,
I wish you hadn't brought that up, whilst I agree that Alonso probably knew that Piquet was going to crash on his behalf, we have no idea how heavily he was involved. What you'll find all the Alonso defenders will pick on this one weak argument and pick it apart rather than answer your points as a whole. It's a repeated tactic, pick on a couple of points that you think you can justify believing that this then invalidates or distracts from the rest of the points that have been made.