WhiteBlue wrote:Michael has a very personal view of what is fair in racing. He grew up in the early nineties when a lot of dirty stuff went down by the top drivers. Now he is the only guy of that generation left who takes a very tough "no prisoners" approach. Guys like Barrichello would never fight this hard. It has its pros and cons. Many fans want do see hard fighting but there are als many commentators who would like the racing to be a a lot more cooperative than the Schu does his driving.
I think it was a wise solution by race control to keep a low profile on the issue as the MSC vs HAM fight clearly was the best part of the race. The rest was mainly the typical borefest, where the fastest car drives away. If yopu like the winning driver it is a good race if you don't like him you have a bad race. A bit of a rolling battle keeps you awake through it. lol
Sorry but what Schumacher did was a lot more sophisticated and finely measured than what you could see in 93 with Senna and his brutal defensíve driving cutting
across the guy behind like there is no tomorrow.He did it with Prost and he did it with Schumacher.
what Schumacher showed yesterday was just insane keeping a car behind wich is over a second quicker in the corners just positioning himself to make a move impossible.
You obviously can work only one guy this way ..and Button managed the situation very well ...but compare this with Button vs Vettel a few races back..to stand that sort of pressure AND have fun doing it is quite remarkable.
Considering the many laps those two oments which were not perfectly ok is really unjustified .
As for Barrichello not being prepared to play hardball ..last year in Hungary RUBY was prepared to die for that pass ...and risk the lives of others as well .It was not just Schumacher not giving up easily ...it was also Ruby in need to make a point.