- 21 Nov 10, 01:13#226623
Too much power, not enough traction? The fact that he avoided touching his team-mate likely contributed to the spin, causing him not to be able to take the best line through the corner and get it wrong trying to stay ahead. It reminded me of Felipe Massa's first-corner incident in Australia, back in 2008. Taking avoiding action going through a corner caused him to spin.
Or did he and a bunch of other people, connected through some wacky means, conspire to 'steal' that result as well?
Have you seen it? How can you explain the way it happened? And he did it at the right place in the perfect moment. Simulating a touch from Rosberg that never took place. He moved just a second before been touched. They were just acting. What a proof do you need, a signed declaration of culpability.
Too much power, not enough traction? The fact that he avoided touching his team-mate likely contributed to the spin, causing him not to be able to take the best line through the corner and get it wrong trying to stay ahead. It reminded me of Felipe Massa's first-corner incident in Australia, back in 2008. Taking avoiding action going through a corner caused him to spin.
Or did he and a bunch of other people, connected through some wacky means, conspire to 'steal' that result as well?
