I never claimed to have never lied. But you're trying to pass this off as a simple white-lie, as if it were insignificant. I have never lied in order to cheat my way in to a better position or f*** somone over. Lied about eating the last chocolate digestive? Yes. Lied about forgetting to shut a window when it's raining? Yes. Lied to get myself a bonus and stop someone else getting one (which, in the corporate world, is the equivalent of what Lewis did)? No. That's where the difference lies. Stop trying to make out like Lewis commited the equivalent of a little misdemeanour, it was the equivalent of gross misconduct!
Gross misconduct? It's still a sporting event isn't it? I guess every soccer player to ever over react to a shove to draw a fowl are also scum. He was told to lie by his team and was being a good employee and did what he was told.
I'm not saying it was a white lie I'm saying Hamilton is unhappy with Mclaren right now because of their poor management. The whole situation was handled in a pathetic manner right from the safety car, someone on the team should have been asking the stewards where Hamilton should have been. Mclaren should have been honest and pleading their position to the stewards before the checkered flag ever came out. If Mclaren's management wasn't pushing the Lie, than why didn't the team go into damage control right after the first stewards meeting instead of letting it go on for a week? There's a simple answer poor team management.
The equivalent of gross misconduct, yes.
Hamilton did
not have to go along with the lie. Don't pull the 'team orders' crap on me. Just look at Hungary 2007 for an example of why you shouldn't believe Hamilton is going to do everything the team tells him.
McLaren were in contact with race control straight away, but race control had more important matters to deal with and with there only being two laps left, there wasn't time to give an answer.
It is simply unacceptable to put this down to poor team management - both parties (Lewis and McLaren) are just as much to blame for this mess as each other. There is no denying that and it is unfair even to try. You are, once again, doing
exactly what McLaren want you to do in believing that it's all the team's fault. This is what they set out to do as soon as it became apparent that Lewis had lied. I'd be surprised that people were falling for it, but then I've discovered that people seem to be somewhat blinkered in situations like these.