I think DSQ would have been a light (though sensible) penalty - it would have caused Rosberg to get exactly the same result as he would have got without breaking the rules.stuartpengs wrote:That's not correct. At the risk of sounding like a broken record that wasn't why he was penalised. The only other penalty available would have been disqualification, which would be incredibly harsh and set and dangerous precedent for the diver coaching violation. Stewards can't invent penalties.Moose wrote:Once again, Rosberg gets an incredibly light penalty. If he and the team had not broken the rules, he would not have finished the race. The FIA once again show that it's better to break the rules and ask forgiveness later than to follow the rules.
Jeezo, it's hard work in here.
Arguably, DSQ *and* a grid drop at the following race (in order to disincentivise breaking the rules) would have been the correct one.