gilgen wrote:ringo wrote:Hamilton made no mistakes. Gilgen is desperately trying to prove Hamilton wrong.
Webber was a fool not to use his brakes. He will make the same mistake again, but this time with another driver.
Gilgen clearly hasn't watched formula1 enough. Marcush and Poleman clearly know what they are talking about; they see it objectively.
Gilgen on the other hand would blame Prost for Senna crashing into him.
Or blame Button for Vettel wiping him out.
I dont understand why you find it neccessary to attack me. I was never a fan of Webbers, so i have no interest in defending him. I have , however, had experience of racing, and so can speak with a modicum of experience. Passing is normally done on the inside of corners, and rarely on the outside, for fear of running off track at the exit. In this case, it was Hamilton who was trying to finish an overtaking move, and miscalculated. In fact, I have always put this incident down to a "racing incident" where both drivers failed to use a little common sense. But there seem to be some who claim that Webber
DELIBERATELY rammed Hamilton. And if you look at my posts, did you not see me referring to Senna deliberately running Prost off the track, and telling him beforehand, that he would do so.
That's a straw man argument. The purpose of the Senna Prost Video was to demonstrate if the following driver can deffend the inside.
It is impossible to defend if you are following. Correct? Yes or No?
Finaly, who has more accountability the following driver or the driver up ahead?
Look on the Alonso pass on Shumacher at Suuka and be honest about it. Alonso was never clearly ahead and he cut in on Shumacher, Hamilton did not cut in on webber, yet Micheal braked earlier and turned in avoiding a collision.
Micheal had more responsibility becuase he had more visual information at his disposal.
I wasn't attacking you, but i really wanted to know if, based on so many examples in the past, that you truly believe the following driver has no responsibility at all to how he approaches a turn with another car.
Was Heiki responsible for Webber crashing into the back of him? You see, too many cases where you simply cannot blame the leading driver.