- 13 May 12, 10:11#302801
You seriously think trying to cover up mistakes when explaining to the stewards is unique to McLaren or something? Considering you're a Ferrari fan lets use them as an example, You don't have to look back too far to hear Ferrari lie about incidents put up to the stewards in order to not get punished. Germany 2010 prime example of the bs explanation by Ferraris management after the race.
hang on a sec cheating? this is hardly cheating a mistake was made which caused this to happen, it was not a deliberate act by the team!
The initial lack of fuel was a simple mistake, which wasn't deliberate. A tap was turned the wrong way and then McLaren had cut the timing so close that there wasn't time to get enough fuel into the car.
However, team management knew of this problem as LH went out on the warm-up lap. As the technician involved told them, and they have very accurate sensors saying how much fuel is in the car. McLaren then took a deliberate decision to allow LH to go for the pole lap rather than aborting the lap. After that Martin Whitmarsh claimed that the car had enough fuel to get back to the pits, when it didn't.
It's not the problem of the initial lack of fuel that is the problem, that's a plain, ordinary, mistake. It's what McLaren did after that which is the much more serious problem. And in my opinion it's McLaren's actions after the problem with low fuel was known that led the stewards to be so draconian.
You seriously think trying to cover up mistakes when explaining to the stewards is unique to McLaren or something? Considering you're a Ferrari fan lets use them as an example, You don't have to look back too far to hear Ferrari lie about incidents put up to the stewards in order to not get punished. Germany 2010 prime example of the bs explanation by Ferraris management after the race.