- 26 Sep 11, 14:45#277447
Something that was discussed on the commentary was the attitude of the drivers in the stewards office along with the drivers past behaviour, I suppose much like the police do if they catch you doing something you shouldn't be doing.
One of the commentators was wondering (to use extremes in attitude) if a driver going in acting like a spoilt sulking petulant child would attract more or is more likely to attract a penalty than someone who goes into the stewards office, cap in hand, minding their p's and q's Guvn'r, owning up straight away and the incident is a one off or a rarity.
I'm not sure about the attitude part but I'm sure the stewards take into account the drivers on-track behaviour to date.
On topic: why on Earth are we arguing about Lewis Hamilton's 'mistake'; this is what is most frustrating about modern F1 for me; stewards are too quick to punish drivers for what would have been considered racing incidents not so long ago. You do have to admit that Lewis does seem to get penalised more frequently than other drivers for similar offences.
Something that was discussed on the commentary was the attitude of the drivers in the stewards office along with the drivers past behaviour, I suppose much like the police do if they catch you doing something you shouldn't be doing.
One of the commentators was wondering (to use extremes in attitude) if a driver going in acting like a spoilt sulking petulant child would attract more or is more likely to attract a penalty than someone who goes into the stewards office, cap in hand, minding their p's and q's Guvn'r, owning up straight away and the incident is a one off or a rarity.
I'm not sure about the attitude part but I'm sure the stewards take into account the drivers on-track behaviour to date.