- 10 Sep 10, 21:42#214474
The Vettel/Webber incident was caused by Vettel's inexperience and apparent inability to overtake his main rivals without crashing. The serious racing is likely to be between team mates as they have the same equipment and telling drivers to hold station or let driver "A" pass driver "B" robs us; the spectators of the spectacle that F1 is supposed to be. I would love F1 to have the same philosophy as the SpeedTV show "Pinks All Out" - either you give everything or you'll be on your way home!
Things would be very different if Massa won and Alonso came home in second; the points be would as follows:
Alonso - 134
Massa - 116
18 points difference; should Alonso crash or finish out of the points at Monza and Massa finished in second or better, he would be equal or in front of Alonso on points, as things stand; Massa can not overtake Alonso in the WDC because of that decision to swap positions; Alonso is 32 points ahead because of Ferrari's actions in Germany!
It seems that teams don't trust their drivers who get paid millions of $$$ to not crash into each other; says a lot about the teams confidence in their drivers doesn't it?
I think it is very easy for two drivers to crash into each other.
A wrong assumption is enough (eg. "Webber is going to yield, I can move right") for the whole thing to end in a disaster.
And having Red Bull issued that warning that team-mates fighting each other can be very dangerous points-wise, I think it's normal Ferrari decided to do it the "hard way".
Team-mates battling is always a very risky thing, as we have seen in the past. Also because the rivalship within the team is unique.
Also, they don't necessarily need to "crash into each other", they just need to break a front wing; which is nowadays very easy to do.
The Vettel/Webber incident was caused by Vettel's inexperience and apparent inability to overtake his main rivals without crashing. The serious racing is likely to be between team mates as they have the same equipment and telling drivers to hold station or let driver "A" pass driver "B" robs us; the spectators of the spectacle that F1 is supposed to be. I would love F1 to have the same philosophy as the SpeedTV show "Pinks All Out" - either you give everything or you'll be on your way home!
Still, he was someway behind Alonso despite Alonso's various mistakes and poor luck.
Things would be very different if Massa won and Alonso came home in second; the points be would as follows:
Alonso - 134
Massa - 116
18 points difference; should Alonso crash or finish out of the points at Monza and Massa finished in second or better, he would be equal or in front of Alonso on points, as things stand; Massa can not overtake Alonso in the WDC because of that decision to swap positions; Alonso is 32 points ahead because of Ferrari's actions in Germany!
myownalias • The Englishman in Kansas • Twitter: @myownalias