- 20 Feb 11, 10:46#240114
I can kind of understand why you think it's blocking - but the simple fact is that it isn't. It's purely 100% due to the onboard cameras without peripheral vision that it looks like that to you. On each of those moves, Senna was on the racing line to turn into the corners in question, and on each of those moves Prost (then Schumacher) were on a tight inside line hoping that Senna would yield. To repeat - Senna was on the racing line in every one of those corners, Prost and Schumacher were not. They were certainly making it difficult for him to turn in and hoping he might not, but clearly they anticipated that he would, as no contact was made. I would be saying exactly the same if it were one of the others on the racing line and Senna tight on the inside, so no bias whatsoever in this one.
Tex - you were too kind with your reply in stating that it was your opinion, because you know as well as I do that what you said wasn't an opinion, it's a fact. I 100% guarantee you that if stewards even today in F1 were watching this, they couldn't find any way to penalise Senna, and in fact if contact were made in any of those corners would be penalising the opposite way to either Prost or Schumacher.
Btw, I too have some experience of racing karts when I was younger, and also as the OP asked for, have been watching F1 for 20+ years.
Thats when racing was racing and not bogged down by the number of manuevers a driver can make to defend their position. Also Senna kept his inertia it seems while Prost and Schumacher did not have the prefered line while attempting to pass thus they lost entry and exit speed. God I miss those days immensely.
Senna was the master at many things and protecting his position without loosing his cool was one of them.
i dont care what label you want to mask it with what senna did in that video is
blocking, everytime prost gets a run he cuts him
up. do you know how hard it is to overtake if the person in front just cuts you off everytime you get a run? too hard, you only need to play f1 2010 to know that. you could be 5 seconds a lap faster but if the car infront aint gonna hive you your rule given right to attempt to pass, you arent getting past in a million years.
I can kind of understand why you think it's blocking - but the simple fact is that it isn't. It's purely 100% due to the onboard cameras without peripheral vision that it looks like that to you. On each of those moves, Senna was on the racing line to turn into the corners in question, and on each of those moves Prost (then Schumacher) were on a tight inside line hoping that Senna would yield. To repeat - Senna was on the racing line in every one of those corners, Prost and Schumacher were not. They were certainly making it difficult for him to turn in and hoping he might not, but clearly they anticipated that he would, as no contact was made. I would be saying exactly the same if it were one of the others on the racing line and Senna tight on the inside, so no bias whatsoever in this one.
Tex - you were too kind with your reply in stating that it was your opinion, because you know as well as I do that what you said wasn't an opinion, it's a fact. I 100% guarantee you that if stewards even today in F1 were watching this, they couldn't find any way to penalise Senna, and in fact if contact were made in any of those corners would be penalising the opposite way to either Prost or Schumacher.
Btw, I too have some experience of racing karts when I was younger, and also as the OP asked for, have been watching F1 for 20+ years.
Favourite racing series: F1, Indycar, NASCAR, GP2, F3, Formula E, Trophee Andros, DTM, WTCC, BTCC, World Endurance... etc. etc.