Singapore's Conspiracy Theory - Briatore/Symonds leave

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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by eytl »

Kuwashima wrote:1) Renault's actions did not "just" put him in the lead with the majority of the race to go, but put him there in an advantageous position with regard to fuel strategy - a position he was not in at the start of the race and could never have been of his own accord. Talk about whoppee!

2) I totally disagree that in order to call the actions race-fixing, you HAVE to 100% guarantee the result. By your logic, I could attempt to kill someone by tampering with their brakes on a road car. Now I can't GUARANTEE that this person will a) get in the car, b) drive fast enough to crash at a speed that will kill them or c) that some other situation will eventuate that ensures the car stops without killing the occupant. But when the driver IS killed (as Alonso won the race here) you won't call it "murder", because I couldn't really guarantee anything, could I? What was it? Well, it was probably trespassing, and definitely vandalism of property. But murder, nooooooo!

3) The reason your example is 'extreme' is because it's not relevant. Running on a light fuel load is a) legal under the regulations, b) an accepted tactic by the grid, and c) everyone can choose to do it or not to do it. It is not an example of anything even remotely close to breaking the regulations of the sport. If I wanted to be even more 'extreme', I could say "Driving quicker than your opponent is a form of position-fixing". But that argument would be nonsensical, as is yours!

4) The argument that says "it's hard to define exactly where team orders finishes and contriving results begins" is a fine point on it's own, but to use that the justify clearly obvious breaches of the moral code of the sport is not fair. It's somewhat akin to a slippery slope argument: "Oh we can't possibly lower the speed limit from 80kph to 60kph, because where will it end?? It's the thin end of the wedge and one day the speed limit will be -10kph and we'll all be driving backwards". ie. nonsense. Just because team orders is a tricky subject, doesn't mean that deliberately crashing your car to vault your teammate into a position to win he race he by rights should never have been in is not a heinous act.


(1) Agree. But that is still way off what I would call "race fixing".

(2) I still think to label an act as "race fixing" requires someone to seek to contrive a result to a far greater extent than what Renault allegedly did by putting Alonso at the head of the field to maximise his strategy. I don't necessarily think you have to guarantee the result 100%, but it's got to come closer than what Renault allegedly did. Throw your wicket away in the cricket at a crucial stage in the innings, score an own goal in soccer, those things play a much greater role in the ultimate result than what Renault are accused of. It's a 'balance of probabilities' question. The brake tampering example doesn't work (even though it is an extreme of the logic) because on the balance of probabilities, there is a fairly large chance that a person will drive fast enough for failed brakes to cause a crash. You used a lightning bolt example previously. There is also a fairly large chance that e.g. a competitor on drugs will NOT be struck by lightning mid race. There was a decent chance Alonso would win with 40-odd laps to go, but there was also a substantial (even if not majority) chance that e.g. he could DNF (he did have a problem in quali after all which is what triggered the whole affair), he could crash, or someone would go even faster than him, or other safety car interventions could shaft his strategy.

(3) Exactly. You've actually just made my point. I'm simply pointing out that there's not even legal clarity about what is allowed and acceptable to put someone at the head of the field.

(4) I'm not justifying any "obvious breach of the moral code of the sport". If what Renault are alleged to have done is proven, I consider it Machiavellian, unsporting, downright dangerous and not something I'd approve of. But that's based on my view of what is the "moral code of the sport". And anyone else who has labelled what Renault are alleged to have done as "cheating" are also merely applying their personal view of what is the "moral code of the sport". And so frankly will the WMSC be doing the same. It just so happens that most people's view of the "moral code of the sport" are similar. But there is no regulation saying it has to be so. It is perfectly feasible for someone with a different view of the "moral code of the sport" to see what Renault allegedly did as creative and sneaky and even allowable. That was the thrust of Dodgins' article which got me started on this position to begin with.

Punish Renault for doing something dangerous, fine. And if this leads to clarification and codification of what is and is not allowed, of what is and is not part of the moral code of the sport, then fine. But I have a major problem with hanging, drawing and quartering Renault, and decrying what they are alleged to have done as "cheating" and "race fixing", based on "rules" and a "moral code" which is not enshrined anywhere and which no-one can point to. Neither you nor I nor Max nor anyone else who has passed comment is the arbiter of what is the "moral code of the sport", even though, as members of the motorsport community even on a tangential fan level, we all have a say. As it turns out, the WMSC will be the arbiter, only because they are the authority in question, and not because of any moral superiority.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Okay, wacky theory time:

1) Piquet is afraid he'll lose his race seat for 2009 and will do anything to keep it.
2) He overhears or somehow finds out that Alonso's best shot at victory is if a safety car is deployed on lap thirteen or fourteen.
3) He approaches Briatore and Symonds and floats the idea of causing the safety car in the hopes that his contract will be renewed.
4) Briatore and Symonds shoot him down.
5) Piquet goes ahead and crashes on lap fourteen anyway.
6) Renault have no choice but to go along with the deception; they can't rightly tell Alonso to let Rosberg through in the dying laps because Alonso knows nothing of it.
7) Piquet demands a contract renewal after the race and threatens to go to the police and/or the FIA claiming the race was fixed.
8) Renault offer a contract, but make sure to include a performance clause in it so that if Piquet is dropped, they'll be in the clear on paper.
9) Piquet is dropped in favour of Grosjean after Hungary after he fails to perform. He retreats to whatever foxhole he came from.
10) He leaks the information about the race-fixing, using his poor standing with Briatore to paint himself as the victim.
11) He provides a false statement to the FIA, or at least one that he has convined himself to be true (Piquet's attitude suggested he thought his poor performacnes were never his fault).
12) The FIA offers Piquet immunity at the WMSC hearing in exchange for his testimony.
13) Renault launch legal action against the Piquet family, claiming they were or are currently being blackmailed.
14) The case goes to the WMSC hearing, where Piquet attempts to destroy Renault altogether.
15) The WMSC have no choice but to find Renault guilty, given that Piquet's telemetry shows the crash was intentional and that they only have Piquet's word against Renault's word on the subject of the conversation between Piquet, Briatore and Symonds.
16) Alternatively, the charges against Renault are dropped due to insufficient or circumstantial evidence (a lot seems to hinge on the pre-race meeting). Piquet doesn't get his revenge, but he does get away with race-fixing.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Mrs Site Author also came up with a very good point on the whole "race fixing" question.

In other sports where there are allegations of "match fixing", the fixer is often trying to ensure he or his team LOSES. It is rare for anyone to try to fix a result so that they win because there are far too many variables that the fixer can't control. Unless you try to bribe the ref. It may be arguable that deliberately crashing to cause a safety car may be a form of forcing officialdom's hand.

The Mrs also pointed out that in many pursuits, the aim of the game is partly to 'rig' the conditions to maximise your chances of winning. Like, for example, in cricket, tampering with the seam of the ball is not allowed, but creative ways of shining the ball is. Bats of certain dimensions are not allowed, but bats of different weights are. So, once more, it comes down to what's legal, what's moral, and, above all ... who/what says so?
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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But Piquet wasn't trying to win the race. He was trying to put Alonso in a position where it was easiest for him to win. If Renault had one what Ferrari did to Massa and released him early in his second stop, it would have cost Alonso the race. While Piquet obviously couldn't influence something tlike that, he could give Alonso the best shot at winning. It doesn't change the fact that, at the very least, he conspired to fix the race. Even if Alonso's engine packed it in thirty seconds later, a crime was still comitted. If somebody breaks into your house intending to rob you, but they cannot work out the combination to your safe, does that mean you let them go free of charge?

Of course not. The fact of the matter is that Piquet intentionally crashed his car, and the telmetry backs him up. He claims it was done to manipulate the outcome of the race. How is that not an example of match-fixing?
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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The Captain touched an important point there: all proof is circumstancial, as far as we know.

There has been that leaked telemetry; it tells me nothing, because I don't know what the telemetry looks like in the other laps (or even if it's true), but I suppose race engineers can look at it and say "yes, he's going to crash". Well, Renault could always pack the telemetry of China 2009 and show off Nelsinho's performances. Either way, Renault is not denying it was on purpose, so that doesn't stick.

If nothing else surfaces, the WMSC probably won't be able to tell who's telling the truth from the Pinocchio in this story. In that case, if they penalise Renault and don't take action against Nelsinho, it will simply confirm what some of us have suspected for some time: that they are not a trustworthy court. FOTA (now that Williams and Force India have quietly rejoined) should just go to Paris, wielding torches, and recreated the French Revolution on the WMSC.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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I've had a thought: What if the reason Max is accusing Renault of cheating and race-fixing isn't because that he thinks that's what it is, or whatever, but because he wants to see if Renault are going to stay in F1 or not? Not the best of ways, admittedly, but with Honda gone, BMW pulling out after this year, and the constant talk of Renault doing the same is not exactly good for F1, especially if Renault do pull out. Most thought it would be Renault pulling out and not BMW, but it has been said that Carlos Ghosn is just talking, and is just putting pressure on the team to perform or whatever, which does make sense; if he didn't want a Renault F1 team, he would've likely pulled them out by now, given the global financial climate and whatnot.

So there's Max, with the unenviable situation of having 2, possibly 3 big teams leave the sport in 2 years. He does want a 26 car grid, from what I've heard and understand, and while having new teams is all well and good, it doesn't do wonders for the sport to have 5, maybe even 6 new teams all entering next year, and especially so if they have very little time to prepare. Then along comes Piquet, with some pretty damning news on Renault. Suddenly, Max has a way to throw the book at Renault, and see if they jump and leave the sport or stand and take it.

Hopefully that all makes sense.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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BlindCaveSalamander wrote:I've had a thought: What if the reason Max is accusing Renault of cheating and race-fixing isn't because that he thinks that's what it is, or whatever, but because he wants to see if Renault are going to stay in F1 or not? Not the best of ways, admittedly, but with Honda gone, BMW pulling out after this year, and the constant talk of Renault doing the same is not exactly good for F1, especially if Renault do pull out. Most thought it would be Renault pulling out and not BMW, but it has been said that Carlos Ghosn is just talking, and is just putting pressure on the team to perform or whatever, which does make sense; if he didn't want a Renault F1 team, he would've likely pulled them out by now, given the global financial climate and whatnot.

So there's Max, with the unenviable situation of having 2, possibly 3 big teams leave the sport in 2 years. He does want a 26 car grid, from what I've heard and understand, and while having new teams is all well and good, it doesn't do wonders for the sport to have 5, maybe even 6 new teams all entering next year, and especially so if they have very little time to prepare. Then along comes Piquet, with some pretty damning news on Renault. Suddenly, Max has a way to throw the book at Renault, and see if they jump and leave the sport or stand and take it.

Hopefully that all makes sense.


If I ever had to imagine what's going on in Max's head, I suppose I wouldn't go beyond NTSMSW5GP. Seriously, though, wouldn't that leave Max's side open for attacks from people pointing out that he had driven Renault out of F1 with such prosecution?
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Why would Max test Renault's commitment by driving them out of F1? Doesn't make much sense to me.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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CarlosFerreira wrote:There has been that leaked telemetry; it tells me nothing, because I don't know what the telemetry looks like in the other laps (or even if it's true), but I suppose race engineers can look at it and say "yes, he's going to crash". Well, Renault could always pack the telemetry of China 2009 and show off Nelsinho's performances. Either way, Renault is not denying it was on purpose, so that doesn't stick.

The telemetry will show the application of accelerator, brake and the turn-in, among other things like gear, engine revs and so forth. It apparently points out that Piquet was accelerating through turn seventeen whereas he braked every other time. The acceleration was enough to turn the R28 into a spin. Even if Renault showed the telemetry from Shanghai, it won't prove anything for their case because Piquet wasn't trying to spin about. He simply over-cooked it a few times; the acceleration and braking points will all be consistent. The spin in Singapore is ananomaly, one that is explained by an intentional spin into the wall.
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:I've had a thought: What if the reason Max is accusing Renault of cheating and race-fixing isn't because that he thinks that's what it is, or whatever, but because he wants to see if Renault are going to stay in F1 or not? Not the best of ways, admittedly, but with Honda gone, BMW pulling out after this year, and the constant talk of Renault doing the same is not exactly good for F1, especially if Renault do pull out. Most thought it would be Renault pulling out and not BMW, but it has been said that Carlos Ghosn is just talking, and is just putting pressure on the team to perform or whatever, which does make sense; if he didn't want a Renault F1 team, he would've likely pulled them out by now, given the global financial climate and whatnot.

So there's Max, with the unenviable situation of having 2, possibly 3 big teams leave the sport in 2 years. He does want a 26 car grid, from what I've heard and understand, and while having new teams is all well and good, it doesn't do wonders for the sport to have 5, maybe even 6 new teams all entering next year, and especially so if they have very little time to prepare. Then along comes Piquet, with some pretty damning news on Renault. Suddenly, Max has a way to throw the book at Renault, and see if they jump and leave the sport or stand and take it.

Hopefully that all makes sense.

I think it's unlikely. This has been forwarded to the WMSC and Renault are taking police action against the Piquets, suggesting they were blackmailing the team. There's to much beyond Mosley's control for him to be able to test Renault's resolve.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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CarlosFerreira wrote:If I ever had to imagine what's going on in Max's head, I suppose I wouldn't go beyond NTSMSW5GP. Seriously, though, wouldn't that leave Max's side open for attacks from people pointing out that he had driven Renault out of F1 with such prosecution?


It's not the best thought out theory, I admit. IIRC, though, Max is going to leave after this year, and he might be looking to take that blame with him. Besides, Renault's commitment to F1 is not the strongest; them leaving is not exactly going to be a shock to the paddock, is it?

shinji wrote:Why would Max test Renault's commitment by driving them out of F1? Doesn't make much sense to me.


The point is, if Max wants a 26 car grid next year, he needs to know now if Renault are going to stay or not. I don't think he wants another Lola on his hands.

Captain Hammer wrote:I think it's unlikely. This has been forwarded to the WMSC and Renault are taking police action against the Piquets, suggesting they were blackmailing the team. There's to much beyond Mosley's control for him to be able to test Renault's resolve.


There is a lot beyond his control, but there doesn't need to be much in it for it to work, I think. All he needs to do is get the book thrown at Renault. Accusations of cheating and race-fixing on top of the inherent safety issues is enough for that, everything else can be disregarded. Ultimately, the Piquets are just pawns in the plan; they've played their part now, what happens to them after this is inconsequential.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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I think you're reading too much into it.

In fact, I think you're assigning a role to Mosley when he has played no part in it at all. He is not the second shooter on the hill. There was never a hill, much less a shooter to be perched on it. There has been nothing to sugest Mosley is stress-testing Renault; if there was even the faintest whiff of it, Renault and FOTA would be all over it by now.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Captain Hammer wrote:I think you're reading too much into it.

In fact, I think you're assigning a role to Mosley when he has played no part in it at all. He is not the second shooter on the hill. There was never a hill, much less a shooter to be perched on it. There has been nothing to sugest Mosley is stress-testing Renault; if there was even the faintest whiff of it, Renault and FOTA would be all over it by now.


Maybe I am reading too much into it, but it does make sense to me. Perhaps I've just been thinking too hard on it, but if there wasn't the faintest whiff of it, I don't think I would've been able to put the pieces together very well at all.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Captain Hammer wrote:
CarlosFerreira wrote:There has been that leaked telemetry; it tells me nothing, because I don't know what the telemetry looks like in the other laps (or even if it's true), but I suppose race engineers can look at it and say "yes, he's going to crash". Well, Renault could always pack the telemetry of China 2009 and show off Nelsinho's performances. Either way, Renault is not denying it was on purpose, so that doesn't stick.

The telemetry will show the application of accelerator, brake and the turn-in, among other things like gear, engine revs and so forth. It apparently points out that Piquet was accelerating through turn seventeen whereas he braked every other time. The acceleration was enough to turn the R28 into a spin. Even if Renault showed the telemetry from Shanghai, it won't prove anything for their case because Piquet wasn't trying to spin about. He simply over-cooked it a few times; the acceleration and braking points will all be consistent. The spin in Singapore is ananomaly, one that is explained by an intentional spin into the wall.


If the leaked telemetry is indeed correct, it does not show any other lap than the fateful one. I would like to see another lap's telemetry, just that.

It's clear that it was provoked, the issue being discussed is whose idea was it. I was just rambling, because I hated the leak itself, plus the fact it didn't show other laps. Made me feel it was specifically created to grill Renault. I have (like you, I believe) some background on Marketing/PR, so I'm hating the smell of spin.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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CarlosFerreira wrote:If the leaked telemetry is indeed correct, it does not show any other lap than the fateful one. I would like to see another lap's telemetry, just that.

It's clear that it was provoked, the issue being discussed is whose idea was it. I was just rambling, because I hated the leak itself, plus the fact it didn't show other laps. Made me feel it was specifically created to grill Renault. I have (like you, I believe) some background on Marketing/PR, so I'm hating the smell of spin.

But if Renault are required to provide telemetry from Piquet's car, it is likely they will have to provide it for every lap he did over the course of the weekend. Hell, the WMSC would probably make them supply Alonso's as well, if they don't simply go to any of the other teams and get their data. Comparing telemetry will be the only way to prove that Nelson Piquet took turn seventeen differently on that lap.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Captain Hammer wrote:
CarlosFerreira wrote:If the leaked telemetry is indeed correct, it does not show any other lap than the fateful one. I would like to see another lap's telemetry, just that.

It's clear that it was provoked, the issue being discussed is whose idea was it. I was just rambling, because I hated the leak itself, plus the fact it didn't show other laps. Made me feel it was specifically created to grill Renault. I have (like you, I believe) some background on Marketing/PR, so I'm hating the smell of spin.

But if Renault are required to provide telemetry from Piquet's car, it is likely they will have to provide it for every lap he did over the course of the weekend. Hell, the WMSC would probably make them supply Alonso's as well, if they don't simply go to any of the other teams and get their data. Comparing telemetry will be the only way to prove that Nelson Piquet took turn seventeen differently on that lap.


My point exactly. The fact only that specific lap of Nelsinho's was released smells of spin, and an attempt at public prosecutions and judgement before the WMSC does it. Popular justice, punishment by demand. I hate it.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Whoa, National Geographic or someone should make an in-depth analysis of this on TV. That'd be interesting to watch.

Anyway, I think the outcome will be that Flavio Briatore will be fired by Renault, Alain Prost will take over as the team Principal and make it a French team with Sébastien Bourdais and Roman Grosjean as the drivers. Nelson Piquet will mysteriously disappear off the face of the earth. :mrgreen:
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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Pat Symonds has been offered immunity. There's no indication as to whether he'll take it, but it strikes me as odd because in this transcript of his discussions with an FIA adviser, he doesn't really answer anything/ He only admits that a discussion too place about it, and maintains that Little Nelson was the one to suggest it. Which says one of two things to me: either the WMSC have set their sights on Flavio Briatore and are trying to turn Symonds on him, or they don't trust The Piquets! and their version of events.

Now, it's easy to say that Max is using this as a platform to go on a witch-hunt that will inevitably end with Flavio's head on a spike ... but Big Nelson has come out overnight and says Alonso has to know about the plan. The Piquets! version of evens changes subtly with each re-telling, and some sources claim that Little Nelson told Bernie that he would do everything he could to see that Briatore was brought down. If the WMSC is not trusting Little Nelson and Symonds is dodging, I think something bigger might be going on.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Stewart »

I'm convinced that this has now turned into a Flavio Briatore witch-hunt. To begin with, it seemed like a genuine investigation, given that the FIA only responded to the Piquets' claims. Now, two out of the three involved parties have been offered immunity, leaving Flav out in the cold. Max Mosely has got rid of Ron Dennis, now he's completing his dream by removing Flav. Any chance he believes these were the two who were behind ANTSMSW5PG?

As for the latest claims about Alonso being in on it; no chance. If you're trying something dodgy, as few people as possible must know about it. Alonso simply didn't need to know. In the pre-podium 'green room', Alonso even mentioned to Flav that he got lucky with the safety car. Not exactly what you'd do if you were trying to cover up the fact that it was deliberate. Even if Alonso suspected something, he'd be a fool to ask any questions because the only thing he would achieve would be to implicate himself.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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That transcript of the interview with Symonds is ... quite staggering. He says he's not lying, then he says he's reserving his position by not answering questions. As a lawyer, frankly answers like that tell a story of their own.

I can understand immunity being offered to Piquet and Nelsinho taking it. I'm sure he's quite happy dobbing in Flav and Renault at the moment. But why offer immunity to Symonds unless there's some belief that he'd take it? Is there a rift between Symonds and Flav and Renault? Would Symonds be employable by any other team if he was proven to be involved in something dodgy? Most agree that Piquet's career is shot - what will this do to Symonds?

Symonds was one of the most respected engineers in the paddock. But my word ... first Mike Coughlan and Nigel Stepney, then Dave Ryan, now allegedly Pat Symonds ... unbelievable ...
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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eytl wrote:Symonds was one of the most respected engineers in the paddock. But my word ... first Mike Coughlan and Nigel Stepney, then Dave Ryan, now allegedly Pat Symonds ... unbelievable ...


It is not a question that it is unbelievable or not, it is a question that these guys are getting caught now. Does anyone believe that previous engineers have been honest and honorable in the past?

Take for instance Cesare Fiorio. This is the guy who asked his daughter to charm her way through McLaren's mechanincs and take photos of the car for Ferrari in the early 90's. Espionage among teams is almost as old as the WDC!

I am not shocked.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

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eytl wrote:But why offer immunity to Symonds unless there's some belief that he'd take it? Is there a rift between Symonds and Flav and Renault?

I don't think there is (he certainly seems to be falling on his sword to protect him), and so they need to create one - offering Symonds immunity is the only way they'll get anything to pin on Briatore.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Enforcer »

Well, in any case, Briatore's probably now a lame duck and will be gone before or shortly after 21st September. Symonds can't possibily work at the team again, even if he takes Briatore with him. Who knows how many loyal people they have between them that'll slowly seep out over the next year or so.
If Alonso wasn't already going to walk, he'll definitely do it now.

A lot of rebuilding for Renault if they stay in the sport.
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CarlosFerreira
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by CarlosFerreira »

A view from another perspective: immunity for Pat Symmonds tells me the FIA has nothing on Renault.

The telemetry may or may not be conclusive. Apart from that - and Renault has been saying he did it on purpose, but by his own initiative, not that he didn't do it - it'll be the testimony of one against the testimony of the other. Immunity for Nelsinho would mean only Renault is convicted, without convincing proof - resulting in an outcry by the other teams and the WMSC being accused, as usual, of being Max's executers.

Another idea, this time about the engineers involved: the manoeuvres we see are probably the result of more intense technical scrutineering. I remember reading a veteran reporter of the US Superbike Championship saying that, at the beginning of the season, technical directors wouldn't ask themselves of their bikes were legal, but if they had cheated enough. With the intense scrutineering in F1 - they found a double fuel tank in Honda, for Chrissakes! - the place to cheat has moved from the cars to the racing.

And, if I may restart an old argument, Dave Ryan was caught in crossfire, and his dismissal is, at the very least, arguable.
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Jordan192
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Jordan192 »

CarlosFerreira wrote:A view from another perspective: immunity for Pat Symmonds tells me the FIA has nothing on Renault.

The telemetry may or may not be conclusive. Apart from that - and Renault has been saying he did it on purpose, but by his own initiative, not that he didn't do it - it'll be the testimony of one against the testimony of the other. Immunity for Nelsinho would mean only Renault is convicted, without convincing proof - resulting in an outcry by the other teams and the WMSC being accused, as usual, of being Max's executers.

The telemetry's pretty conclusive, even without another lap to compare it to - full throttle is re-applied with the rear wheels still spinning, and remains applied until after impact with the wall. Also Renault's position isn't quite that "he did it on his own initiative", but "he came up with the idea". Symond's inablility to deny things like recommending the best place to do it is probably enough for the WMSC to nail him personally.
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CarlosFerreira
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by CarlosFerreira »

Jordan192 wrote:
CarlosFerreira wrote:A view from another perspective: immunity for Pat Symmonds tells me the FIA has nothing on Renault.

The telemetry may or may not be conclusive. Apart from that - and Renault has been saying he did it on purpose, but by his own initiative, not that he didn't do it - it'll be the testimony of one against the testimony of the other. Immunity for Nelsinho would mean only Renault is convicted, without convincing proof - resulting in an outcry by the other teams and the WMSC being accused, as usual, of being Max's executers.

The telemetry's pretty conclusive, even without another lap to compare it to - full throttle is re-applied with the rear wheels still spinning, and remains applied until after impact with the wall. Also Renault's position isn't quite that "he did it on his own initiative", but "he came up with the idea". Symond's inablility to deny things like recommending the best place to do it is probably enough for the WMSC to nail him personally.


You may have a point there, but believing so means I have no other explanation for these developments than a deliberate attempt at framing Briatore. And I still refuse to see the WMSC as that sort of institution.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Stewart »

Jordan192 wrote:The telemetry's pretty conclusive, even without another lap to compare it to - full throttle is re-applied with the rear wheels still spinning, and remains applied until after impact with the wall. Also Renault's position isn't quite that "he did it on his own initiative", but "he came up with the idea". Symond's inablility to deny things like recommending the best place to do it is probably enough for the WMSC to nail him personally.
Agreed on the telemetry; either it was deliberate, or Piquet Jr really is the worst driver in the world. You'd expect any driver to lift their foot after spinning up the rear wheels, but he just keeps his foot on the pedal.

Symonds was not 'unable' to answer the questions, as you put it; he simply chose not to. I've read all the transcripts, and yes, not answering the questions does make him look guilty; he even admits that at the end of his interview. However, refusing to answer doesn't actually make the person guilty.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by noisebox »

The Times have published the radio transmissions before, during and after the crash. Interesting stuff...

The transcript starts off with Symonds, Piquet and an engineer discussing the team's strategy.

Symonds: "I can tell you now we are not three-stopping.

Symonds: "Don't worry about fuel because I'm going to get him [Alonso] out of this traffic earlier than that."

Piquet: "What lap are we in, what lap are we in?"

Renault engineer: "He just asked: 'What lap are we in?'"

Symonds replies: "Yeah, tell him that he's about to complete lap eight."

Symonds adds. "No, just tell him, he is about, he's just completing, he's about to complete lap eight."

Later Symonds says: "Right, I'm going to... I think we're going to stop him just before we catch him [Williams driver Kazuki Nakajima, who was ahead of Alonso] and get him out of it, the reason being we've still got this worry on the fuel pump. It's only a couple of laps short. We're going to be stopping him early and we're going to go to lap 40."

Following Alonso's pit stop, Symonds tells to the engineer: "OK right, you've got to push him really bloody hard now. If he [Piquet] doesn't get past Barrichello, he's going nowhere, he's got to get past Barrichello this lap."

Briatore adds: "Tell him, push."

Piquet's race engineer: "Nelson, no excuses now, you've got to get past Barrichello. You've got four clicks straight-line advantage. Come on, you've got to push now, you must get past him."

The Brazilian puts his car in the wall a few minutes later at Turn 17.

Multiple voices: "Nelson's off. F****** hell. Nelson's had a crash. I would say that would be a red flag. It's huge [all speaking at the same time] .

Piquet: "Sorry guys. I had a little outing."

Engineer: "Is he all right, Is he all right?"

Symonds: "Ask him if he's all right."

Engineer: "Are you OK? Are you OK?"

Engineer: "Fernando's just gone past it."

Engineer: "OK, yellow flag."

Piquet: "Yeah, I hit my head in the back. I think I'm OK."

Engineer: "OK, understood."

Symonds: "Right [inaudible], stop him."

Engineer: "Safety car, safety car, safety car, safety car. Fernando, safety car, mixture three."

Symonds: "Tell him to be careful, turn 17 I think it is."

Engineer: "F****** hell that was a big shunt."

Briatore: "F****** hell ... my every f****** disgrace, f******, he's not a driver."

Symonds: "What position is Fernando in?"

Engineer: "Well, we were 20, and we're first guy to pick the safety car up."

Symonds: "Yeah, we're not ..."

Engineer: "He will get away past it but he's got to wait."

Briatore: "What position we are now in all this?"

Symonds replies: "To be honest, I don't know Flavio. It's got to have been good for Fernando. But I honestly don't know where he is."
"will you stop him playing tennis then?", referring to Montoya's famous shoulder injury, to which Whitmarsh replied "well, it's very difficult to play tennis on a motorbike"
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by kowalski »

my favorite part is

my every f****** disgrace


- i'm going to be using that at every opertunity...

infact, i have a meeting later today and it will be my challenge to sneek it into the conversation!


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noisebox
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by noisebox »

kowalski wrote:my favorite part is

my every f****** disgrace


- i'm going to be using that at every opertunity...

infact, i have a meeting later today and it will be my challenge to sneek it into the conversation!


-Rejects unite! - make it your challenge for today :)

As I'm at home today it'll have to be directed at the wife or kids...!
"will you stop him playing tennis then?", referring to Montoya's famous shoulder injury, to which Whitmarsh replied "well, it's very difficult to play tennis on a motorbike"
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Stewart »

Renault have just announced that Briatore and Symonds have left the team and that they will not contest the race fixing allegations next week.
No news stories yet, but it's all over the more reliable Twitter feeds.

Edit: Now on Autosport:
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/78668
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Paul Hayes »

This has to be a damage-limitation exercise on Renault's part. They're hoping the FIA will be lenient if they are seen to have "dealt" with the problem themselves. But the FIA's own - often ignored, admittedly - regulations state that the team is responsible for the conduct of all its members.

Monday should be interesting.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by eytl »

What the??? :shock:

What in heaven's name is going on??? :o

Actually, I agree that this is Renault trying to do a Whitmarsh post-lie-gate, ie get rid of the culprits and hope to curry favour with the FIA that way.

But here we were, speculating that even if Renault pulled the plug on the team, Flav would take it over by himself ... and now Flav and Symonds are BOTH gone.

This is fast becoming the craziest story that F1 has seen in a very, very, very long time.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Debaser »

Unbelieveable...I'm stunned, and also they've basically admitted their guilt. which I can't believe either. Surely the end of Renault in F1...
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Captain Hammer »

Debaser wrote:Unbelieveable...I'm stunned, and also they've basically admitted their guilt. which I can't believe either. Surely the end of Renault in F1...

Admission of guilt usually leads to a more lenient sentence. Renault as a whole are clearly moving to distance themselves from Briatore and Symonds; I think they would like to compete in 2010, but they want to show that this was an isolated incident.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by TomWazzleshaw »

This story just becomes wierder and wierder by the minute.
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by AutoRacer5 »

eytl wrote:
This is fast becoming the craziest story that F1 has seen in a very, very, very long time.


Yeah, since... spygate

Not that long ago enoch

:mrgreen:
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by eytl »

Personally, I think this is bigger than spy-gate ...
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by AutoRacer5 »

eytl wrote:Personally, I think this is bigger than spy-gate ...


I think they're pretty close in terms of importance. What story would you say is as big as this one?
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Paul Hayes »

So who will take over at Renault? I know Prost's name has been mentioned, but surely nobody would trust him with the running of an F1 team again, would they?
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Re: Singapore's Conspiracy Theory

Post by Salamander »

Paul Hayes wrote:This has to be a damage-limitation exercise on Renault's part. They're hoping the FIA will be lenient if they are seen to have "dealt" with the problem themselves. But the FIA's own - often ignored, admittedly - regulations state that the team is responsible for the conduct of all its members.

Monday should be interesting.


If that's what they're doing, then it might just work - it worked for McLaren, after all.
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