Interesting race for sure, but I'm having mixed with all the safety car laps and what not. It feels like Schumacher got robbed of a podium by DRS. But I'm really happy about Button beating Vettel.
Interesting race for sure, but I'm having mixed with all the safety car laps and what not. It feels like Schumacher got robbed of a podium by DRS. But I'm really happy about Button beating Vettel.
Actually, When Button looked in his mirrors, Hamilton was behind him. Button took the racing line and any chances he had of seeing Hamilton were greatly decreased by the spray. As seen in Le Mans last night, it's up to the overtaking car to ensure that the manouver is safe. Hamilton could easily have lifted when he saw Button wasn't going to give the position up. He didn't. He expects people to move out of his way.
If he continues putting people in difficult positions the way he has been doing, then it's only a matter of time before someone is seriously injured or killed. I don't like him for this very reason. He thinks he is bigger than F1 itself and doesn't play by the rules. He is a dirty driver. He is an accident waiting to happen and something's got to be done about him. He has to calm down and re-learn what battles to pick and when or someone will get hurt.
If he can't do this, he should be banned. He's starting to look like an amateur crashaholic. F1 rejects awarded him the reject of the race at Monaco. I'm sure they'll do the same here. You can flame me all you want, but he is dangerous. The past two races he's looked like a complete amateur with multiple accidents where he was either solely to blame or at least had to accept 50% of the blame. You can whine and call it racing incidents all you want, but as far as I'm concerned, there have been too many involving the same person to call them racing incidents.
Lots of hating on Kobayashi in the official post-race driver quotes. Heidfeld and both Williams drivers said he caused them problems. Seemed like there were a couple others too. Slow and unpredictable seems like the main undercurrent. No love by Massa for Karthekayen (sp) either -- who apparently was the backmarker who forced Felipe off line. (The SPEED idiots thought it was a Virgin.) Alonso, on the other hand, took the high road and didn't say anything about Button. He chalked the whole day up to bad luck. Smart move, that.
Just watched a delayed version of the race, and I know there are a lot of 'omg lol that was a great race lol' people, but that was a putrid advert for F1 to the neutral N/A observer tuning in the for the first time:
1) Safety Car start? Are they the world's best drivers or sunday amateurs? Go watch Motogp at Silverstone to see how you should earn your keep.
2) Two 1-time world champions getting together (team mates on top of it), followed by a double WC getting together with a 1-time WC. I was waiting for the 'dada-tish'.
3) Endless nurfs (under safety cars?!), bumps, lost wings, cut chicanes...I can see how a new watcher might wonder what all the fuss is about.
4) Fat stewards falling (repeatedly) on track, in front of advancing racecars?! You are kidding me.
The safety car took a while to pick up the leader. They probably thought the field was strung out enough that they had more time, and that they could clear the debris quickly enough that the safety car would not have to stay out much longer.I don't really know what those marshalls were thinking trying to clear debris with only 10 second intervals between the cars? Surely they should wait till they have been picked up by the safety car?
I kinda laughed a little seeing Alonso stuck on the kerb trying to get away, I know I shouldn't or was there more damage to the car?
This is nothing to do with people being cowards.
Clearly you don't understand anything about the words "aquaplaning" and "visibility".
As I watched a rebroadcast, I didnt know there was a 2 hr gap in the race due to monsoonal rain.
However, how the MotoGP were able to start their race in rain and standing water, with less contact patch to work with and equally poor visibility and the GP guys had to get a pacecar start, is still not clear to me.
A MotoGP bike doesn't clear anywhere near as much water from the track that an F1 car will.However, how the MotoGP were able to start their race in rain and standing water, with less contact patch to work with and equally poor visibility and the GP guys had to get a pacecar start, is still not clear to me.
From herePirelliThe wet tyre has a tread depth of five millimetres and is able to cope with a level of standing water of up to five millimetres before aquaplaning sets in. One of Pirelli’s wet tyres will clear up to 60 litres of water per second at 300kph, meaning that a Formula One car at full speed will clean up 240 litres of water per second
Canada typically has a 1st/2nd corner accident due to the short run to the first corner and the tightness of that turn, so i think the safety car start was the right choice. We don't want a huge accident at the start with only 6 cars making it through the carnage, now do we?
A MotoGP bike doesn't clear anywhere near as much water from the track that an F1 car will.
A MotoGP bike will do a miniscule fraction of that.