MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
On 24/10/2020 9:56 am, Sir Tim wrote:
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Charitable. I'd say it was more Stroll's fault, he is required to
leave room if a car is significantly alongside. Safnauer said to the commentators "I haven't spoken to him yet but he couldn't have seen
him - if he did he wouldn't have turned in".
~misfit~ wrote:
On 24/10/2020 9:56 am, Sir Tim wrote:
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Charitable. I'd say it was more Stroll's fault, he is required to
leave room if a car is significantly alongside. Safnauer said to the
commentators "I haven't spoken to him yet but he couldn't have seen
him - if he did he wouldn't have turned in".
Practice and the race are not he same thing. The point of practice is
to run laps not get to the finish line ahead of the driver in front of
you. Ergo...
The Stewards heard from the driver of Car 18 (Lance Stroll), the driver
of car 33 (Max
Verstappen), team representatives and have reviewed video and audio
evidence.
Stroll was on a fast lap and was allowed to pass by Verstappen on the
lap preceding
the incident. Given the information from his team and usual practice, Verstappen
assumed that Stroll would back off for the next lap and moved to
overtake along the
main straight. However, Stroll was instructed by his team to go for a
second flying lap.
Stroll assumed that Verstappen would have backed off to gain a gap
between them,
also in line with usual practice, and so was not looking for the
overtaking Verstappen.
The drivers agreed in the hearing that the incident was the result of a misunderstanding
between them and that with hindsight, both could have contributed to
avoid the incident.
The Stewards therefore find that neither driver was wholly or
predominantly at fault and
take no further action.
~misfit~ wrote:
On 24/10/2020 9:56 am, Sir Tim wrote:
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Charitable. I'd say it was more Stroll's fault, he is required to
leave room if a car is significantly alongside. Safnauer said to the
commentators "I haven't spoken to him yet but he couldn't have seen
him - if he did he wouldn't have turned in".
Practice and the race are not he same thing. The point of practice is
to run laps not get to the finish line ahead of the driver in front of
you. Ergo...
The Stewards heard from the driver of Car 18 (Lance Stroll), the driver
of car 33 (Max
Verstappen), team representatives and have reviewed video and audio
evidence.
Stroll was on a fast lap and was allowed to pass by Verstappen on the
lap preceding
the incident. Given the information from his team and usual practice, Verstappen
assumed that Stroll would back off for the next lap and moved to
overtake along the
main straight. However, Stroll was instructed by his team to go for a
second flying lap.
Stroll assumed that Verstappen would have backed off to gain a gap
between them,
also in line with usual practice, and so was not looking for the
overtaking Verstappen.
The drivers agreed in the hearing that the incident was the result of a misunderstanding
between them and that with hindsight, both could have contributed to
avoid the incident.
The Stewards therefore find that neither driver was wholly or
predominantly at fault and
take no further action.
On 2020-10-23 11:32 p.m., Bigbird wrote:
~misfit~ wrote:
On 24/10/2020 9:56 am, Sir Tim wrote:
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Charitable. I'd say it was more Stroll's fault, he is required to
leave room if a car is significantly alongside. Safnauer said to the
commentators "I haven't spoken to him yet but he couldn't have seen
him - if he did he wouldn't have turned in".
Practice and the race are not he same thing. The point of practice is
to run laps not get to the finish line ahead of the driver in front of
you. Ergo...
The Stewards heard from the driver of Car 18 (Lance Stroll), the driver
of car 33 (Max
Verstappen), team representatives and have reviewed video and audio
evidence.
Stroll was on a fast lap and was allowed to pass by Verstappen on the
lap preceding
the incident. Given the information from his team and usual practice,
Verstappen
assumed that Stroll would back off for the next lap and moved to
overtake along the
main straight. However, Stroll was instructed by his team to go for a
second flying lap.
Stroll assumed that Verstappen would have backed off to gain a gap
between them,
also in line with usual practice, and so was not looking for the
overtaking Verstappen.
The drivers agreed in the hearing that the incident was the result of a
misunderstanding
between them and that with hindsight, both could have contributed to
avoid the incident.
The Stewards therefore find that neither driver was wholly or
predominantly at fault and
take no further action.
I only just saw the replay and that seems about right.
Two drivers got a little screwed up about who was where and doing what.
~misfit~ wrote:
On 24/10/2020 9:56 am, Sir Tim wrote:
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Charitable. I'd say it was more Stroll's fault, he is required to
leave room if a car is significantly alongside. Safnauer said to the
commentators "I haven't spoken to him yet but he couldn't have seen
him - if he did he wouldn't have turned in".
Practice and the race are not he same thing. The point of practice is
to run laps not get to the finish line ahead of the driver in front of
you. Ergo...
The Stewards heard from the driver of Car 18 (Lance Stroll), the driver
of car 33 (Max
Verstappen), team representatives and have reviewed video and audio
evidence.
Stroll was on a fast lap and was allowed to pass by Verstappen on the
lap preceding
the incident. Given the information from his team and usual practice, Verstappen
assumed that Stroll would back off for the next lap and moved to
overtake along the
main straight. However, Stroll was instructed by his team to go for a
second flying lap.
Stroll assumed that Verstappen would have backed off to gain a gap
between them,
also in line with usual practice, and so was not looking for the
overtaking Verstappen.
The drivers agreed in the hearing that the incident was the result of a misunderstanding
between them and that with hindsight, both could have contributed to
avoid the incident.
The Stewards therefore find that neither driver was wholly or
predominantly at fault and
take no further action.
On 24/10/2020 8:25 pm, Alan Baker wrote:
On 2020-10-23 11:32 p.m., Bigbird wrote:
~misfit~ wrote:
On 24/10/2020 9:56 am, Sir Tim wrote:
Heron <McKeister@ipanywhere.com> wrote:
MV causes yet ANOTHER crash, in FP2 no less, has the
gall to blames contact on the car in FRONT of him!
Looked like 50-50 to me. Both expected the other to give way.
Charitable. I'd say it was more Stroll's fault, he is required to
leave room if a car is significantly alongside. Safnauer said to the
commentators "I haven't spoken to him yet but he couldn't have seen
him - if he did he wouldn't have turned in".
Practice and the race are not he same thing. The point of practice is
to run laps not get to the finish line ahead of the driver in front of
you. Ergo...
The Stewards heard from the driver of Car 18 (Lance Stroll), the driver
of car 33 (Max
Verstappen), team representatives and have reviewed video and audio
evidence.
Stroll was on a fast lap and was allowed to pass by Verstappen on the
lap preceding
the incident. Given the information from his team and usual practice,
Verstappen
assumed that Stroll would back off for the next lap and moved to
overtake along the
main straight. However, Stroll was instructed by his team to go for a
second flying lap.
Stroll assumed that Verstappen would have backed off to gain a gap
between them,
also in line with usual practice, and so was not looking for the
overtaking Verstappen.
The drivers agreed in the hearing that the incident was the result of a
misunderstanding
between them and that with hindsight, both could have contributed to
avoid the incident.
The Stewards therefore find that neither driver was wholly or
predominantly at fault and
take no further action.
I only just saw the replay and that seems about right.
Two drivers got a little screwed up about who was where and doing what.
VER should have noticed that STR's DRS was open and what he was doing.
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