Again, no one is saying it was deliberate, however whether it was accidental or otherwise is totally irrelevant. Hamilton’s fastest time was set during a lap where he gained an advantage by leaving the track. This is black and white to me.beelsebob wrote:But again – he wasn't penalised, because he made no deliberate breach of the rules – he simply had the lap on which he slipped up deleted.
I’m not disagreeing with the demotion down the grid at all as it is the correct action, however if Hamilton starts on new tyres it is an advantage over those starting on used tyres. Hamilton doesn’t have new tyres because he chose not to go out, but because his time was disallowed. Do you not see how, for any driver (be it Hamilton, Vettel, Alonso, Massa etc etc) in this position that the severity of the penalty is watered down by the driver having the option of new tyres? If McLaren play their cards right and don't screw-up the race strategy then this could actually work out quite well for them.beelsebob wrote:It's in no way different – in both cases, it concerns an accidental slip, and in both cases it concerns whether the stewards/rules should cause the lap to be ignored, or a penalty to be issued. I believe in these circumstances the rules state that the lap should simply be deleted. The stewards seem to agree, as this is what they've done.