Hamlet
Nik, the whole idea here is to make a more informed decision rather than a split sec/emotional decision during a race. They both have their pros and cons and by no means neither system is perfect. Lastly, they are both ran by people...
Under the circumstances I still feel it was the right call.
Yes, and other racing series are able to do that without the cumbersome shenanigans you tend to see in F1. You can come up with clear rulings and clear explanations for them without needing 3 hour post-race debilitations or post-race penalties (arguably the most infamous example being Ayrton Senna 1989 Suzuka). The only reason for post-race penalties in most other series is for technical infringements or other forms of cheating.
What a series needs is a thorough and clear enough rulebook, and consistent, competent enough stewards to enforce them. These regulations should be clear and consistent enough that teams, drivers, and fans would be able to understand a good chunk of them should they look them up. F1 is not and has never been a paragon when it comes to its ever-quickly-changing and at times confusing rules and regulations.
Still, on the case of Verstappen and Leclerc I do agree they are right to not award a penalty; it's just rather ridiculous that there is a post-race 3 hour review after the race, after the podium ceremony and trophies have been awarded. Side-by-side racing like that has always been a grey area, and you can find instances of the car on the inside pushing the driver on the outside wide everywhere without penalties being handed out. The main reason this incident has blown up is because of the controversial penalty back in Canada; one side of the fanbase argues Vettel is not as fault as he's recovering from his off-roading detour and didn't deliberately turn into Lewis, the other argues that Vettel is deliberately swiping into Hamilton's path to force him into the wall. Whether you agree with one or the other, the official transcript from the FIA regarding the decision has rather vague wording:
"Decision: 5 sec time penalty, 2 penalty points on license
The stewards reviewed video evidence and determined that Car 5 (Vettel), left the track at turn 3, rejoined the track at turn 4 in an unsafe manner and forced Car 44 (Hamilton) off track. Car 44 had to take evasive action to avoid a collision"
Which some will argue is a harsh but perhaps fair penalty. I say otherwise as I believe at most if Vettel is deliberate, it's to defend his position by positioning his car rather than forcing Hamilton into the wall as there's virtually no run-off on the outside.
But then compare the Vettel vs Hamilton incident with Verstappen vs Leclerc, and you can see where the issues most fans take with lie:
Vettel vs Hamilton:
- Vettel makes a mistake; he didn't deliberately cut the corner
- When Vettel rejoins the track, he is at reduced speed and not completely alongside Hamilton, but leaves some room on the outside
- Hamilton takes evasive action on the outside, even backing off, to avoid a collision, but otherwise had room to work with
- All in all, very good driving from both these world champions to avoid contact
Verstappen vs Leclerc:
- Verstappen and Leclerc go into the turn side-by-side after Leclerc for some reason leaves the door as wide open as a shark's gaping maw. Verstappen is on the inside and Leclerc on the outside. Remember both cars are side by side.
- Verstappen deliberately pushes Leclerc outside and off the circuit
- Leclerc has to take evasive action, going onto the runoff area to avoid a collision, but it was otherwise hard but arguably fair racing
If you compare the two incidents, the penalty for one and the lack of penalty for the other, it's very easy to see why the fanbase is divided.
Even if Vettel had gotten a penalty, it's unfortunate that the minimum penalty for F1 is a 5 second time penalty. In other series some penalties merely involve the shuffling of on-track position, and if applied to Vettel vs. Hamilton,
if applied, Vettel will merely be asked to concede position to Hamilton before being allowed to battle on-track again.
But in the span of 2 races it's quite evident that the way F1 rules work and are enforced by the stewards leave quite a bit to be desired.
P.S. I like the idea of Forum Fridays for iGP-related discussions. Perhaps they could be separate from F1-related or other racing-related ones.