The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

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mario
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by mario »

Shadaza wrote:
CoopsII wrote:
WeirdKerr wrote:I'm actually surprised nobody pointed out that Webber nearly had Vettel into the pitwall.....

Not once, but twice...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... kG06ixh92c


Wow I never saw that, that is really out of order from Mark. It does not justify Vettel breaking the team orders but that looked really really dangerous.

The first time was uncomfortably close to the Schumacher-Barrichello move in Hungary a few years ago, but the latter move, whilst perhaps not surprising given how angry Webber was, was pretty nasty. I can imagine that, whilst Vettel's move has certainly riled those within the team, there were probably a few words in Mark's direction about that move...

As an aside, there is a little article on F1Fanatic that gives the radio transmissions of some of the teams in Australia who were managing the position of their drivers in that race too (Pic was instructed that van der Garde would yield his position on the main straight on lap 13, whilst Bottas appears to have been asked to let Maldonado through earlier in the race but refused to allow him to pass him). http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2013/03/25/r ... am-orders/
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by fjackdaw »

I find it odd that people are discussing ways for Red Bull to penalise their own driver. You want a driver who obeys rules, but seriously, how hard is a team really going to come down on its most likely WDC candidate for winning a race?
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by CarlosFerreira »

fjackdaw wrote:I find it odd that people are discussing ways for Red Bull to penalise their own driver. You want a driver who obeys rules, but seriously, how hard is a team really going to come down on its most likely WDC candidate for winning a race?


Exactly. Red Bull need to make some noise now, but only because they were obviously disobeyed in public. What happened on the track followed the plan, they just need to deal the PR fallout.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by DanielPT »

fjackdaw wrote:I find it odd that people are discussing ways for Red Bull to penalise their own driver. You want a driver who obeys rules, but seriously, how hard is a team really going to come down on its most likely WDC candidate for winning a race?


They won't. But we like discussing even the most remotely probable ideas as long as they are cool. It is more probable for RBR to sack Horner and nominate Vettel as team principal along with his driving position. Although let me say that Vettel already is the team principal, at least unofficially.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by LellaLombardi »

From the Daily Mash: :lol:

Formula One launches race unfixing probe

F1 BOSSES have launched an investigation after a race somehow became unfixed.
Footage of the Malaysian Grand Prix allegedly shows Sebastian Vettel operating his car in the manner of someone trying to win.

The resulting controversy has left everyone not obsessed by Formula One deeply confused.

A Red Bull team spokesman said: “We take allegations of racing extremely seriously.

“Drivers must remember that this is not a sport but a deeply weird and monotonous pre-programmed entertainment experience that is completely incomprehensible to sane people.

“Kind of like Wacky Races but with odder drivers, more ridiculous-looking cars and lots of girls who look like hookers.”

F1 devotee Julian Cook said: “You could clearly see Vettel trying to accelerate past another car in order to make his car go over the finish line first.

“According to the twisted logic of the bizarre quasi-sport that I love for no apparent reason, this is quite unacceptable.

“If it’s proven that Vettel was trying to win, Bernie Ecclestone should have him thrown into a pit of scorpions.

“Although in some of the countries where they do F1 I think that would considered an excessively humane form of punishment.”
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Shadaza »

Autosport are reporting that the reason for Maldonado's retirement was a KERS issue and not a crash,
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Aerospeed »

Shadaza wrote:Autosport are reporting that the reason for Maldonado's retirement was a KERS issue and not a crash,


Unintended KERS acceleration?
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Shadaza »

JeremyMcClean wrote:
Shadaza wrote:Autosport are reporting that the reason for Maldonado's retirement was a KERS issue and not a crash,


Unintended KERS acceleration?


"His (Maldonado's) eventual retirement was down to a KERS issue rather than driver error, however." Under the Autosport driver ratings.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Cynon »

Regardless of the fallout of this mess, I'm an even bigger Vettel fan because he had the balls to ignore team orders and to go win the race.

Massive respect right there... finally, an F1 driver who isn't content with 2nd place and who will fight for the win when given a chance.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by fjackdaw »

CarlosFerreira wrote:
fjackdaw wrote:I find it odd that people are discussing ways for Red Bull to penalise their own driver. You want a driver who obeys rules, but seriously, how hard is a team really going to come down on its most likely WDC candidate for winning a race?


Exactly. Red Bull need to make some noise now, but only because they were obviously disobeyed in public. What happened on the track followed the plan, they just need to deal the PR fallout.


I'm not sure there was a plan as such, just that in the long run Seb moved them seven points closer towards beating a Ferrari or Lotus driver to the WDC. It would be nice for Mark to win it, but it's usually Herr Vettel.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by ibsey »

CoopsII wrote:
WeirdKerr wrote:I'm actually surprised nobody pointed out that Webber nearly had Vettel into the pitwall.....

Not once, but twice...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... kG06ixh92c


You may not believe me here, but I was actually tempted to point it after the race. However in the end I didn’t partly because of lack of time. But mainly for another reason, which is I regard Webber as a much ‘cleaner’ driver than either M Schumi or Senna. So although what he did in both incidents were horrific, irrespective of the circumstances behind it. And although my initial reaction to seeing the first incident during the race was... ‘that was as bad as the Schumi-Barrichello move in Hungary 2010, or even the Senna – Prost move at Portgual 1988’. Pretty soon afterwards I realised that actually it was completely out of character for Webber. Somebody who for many years has raced very hard but crucially very fair. Always.

So, I always felt that Webber wouldn’t have actually put Vettel in the pitwall. Instead he seemed to be doing it just to make his point to Vettel (re; team orders), rather than think what he was doing was actually an ‘acceptable’ defensive move. I think for me that is the crucial difference here. Both M Schumi (at Adelaide 1994 & Spa 1995) and Senna (at Brazil 1986) had shown prior to their respective incidents that they were willing to drive their competitors off the road, in order to win. Whereas, prior to last weekend's race, Mark's time in F1 shows us that not the sort of thing he does.

Therefore what Senna & M Schumi both consider an ‘acceptable’ defensive move is different from what Webber would (IMO). So whislt I am certain that Webber would have only pushed Vettel up gainst[b] the pitwall & not actually [b]into it. I am less certain about Senna or M Schumi intentions. In short, I bet when M Schumi or Senna were pulling off their moves, they didn’t feel it was wrong. Whereas I’m sure Webber did feel what he was doing was wrong, but by that point anger was getting the better of him.

So although what Mark did in both incidents was bang out of order, of that there can be no doubt. As no matter how clean a driver's intentions are, or how skillful they are. I believe in those circumstances you are still at risk from outside factors like hitting a bump or a damp patch etc which then can result in a massive... potentially fatal accident. However the end of the day, I now don’t consider Webber putting Vettel in the pitwall quite as bad as M Schumi at Hungary or Senna at Portgual 1988. Hopefully all of this makes sense.

I also hadn't seen the second incident until now (thanks for posting the link CoopsII). I wonder whether Webber might be in danger from the FIA for his actions there? As the Maldonodo’s Penalty from Spa 2011 shows us that using your car as a Weapon will not be tolerated anymore in F1. As far as I can see Mark did use his car as a weapon there...although admittedly one can understand the circumstances behind it & Mark didn’t actually touch Vettel. Furthermore Webber’s F1 history, suggests nor was it Webber's intentions to touch Vettel in both incidents. To my mind, the FIA should take a common sense approach on this & not give Webber a grid penalty but simply fine him & give him a warning over these incidents & make that public. Otherwise we might have kids thinking that sort of behavior is OK if someone angers you in a race.

Quick word on the penalty Red Bull should hand Vettel (I don’t know if this has been discussed already here or not). But I reckon Red Bull should ensure whenever Vettel is leading Webber in a race, then he has to hand the position over to Mark. Until Vettel has effectively handed Mark 14 points (double what Vettel took off Mark at Malaysia...as punishment). Of course that is based on the assumption that the two Red Bull drivers will be in a position to carry this out again this season. But it is the only fair & firm punishment I can think of at the moment.

However lets not lose sight of the fact that it is not uncommon for drivers to ignore team orders as Mario has pointed out. In addition to his examples at Australia 2013, & off the top of my head, I can think of Hamiton ignore pit instructions to let his teammate by in Q3 at Hungary 2007, which then led to Alonso sitting in the pit box costing Hamilton’s his final run. Then there was Alesi ignore the team’s instruction to pit at Australia 1997, & perhaps even Mansell ignoring the team requests to save fuel when he was on his famous charge during the last few laps at Sliverstone 1987. IIRC I don’t think any of these driver ever got more than slapped wrists for their defiance?

So whilst it maybe true that Red Bull have to be seen publicly to be disciplining Vettel, if nothing else just to show equality within the team. Honestly, the way I see it, Vettel is still their golden boy. So I can’t see them doing anything too severe to him.
Last edited by ibsey on 26 Mar 2013, 16:35, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by FullMetalJack »

The F1 Slate has it's say on what happened.

I knew Schumacher and Barrichello would be featured, especially because of their incident at Hungary a few years back.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by FMecha »

From the wiki, it is said that Reutmann did ignore team orders back in '81. :)
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

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ibsey wrote:However lets not lose sight of the fact that it is not uncommon for drivers to ignore team orders as Mario has pointed out. In addition to his examples at Australia 2013, & off the top of my head, I can think of Hamiton ignore pit instructions to let his teammate by in Q3 at Hungary 2007, which then led to Alonso sitting in the pit box costing Hamilton’s his final run. Then there was Alesi ignore the team’s instruction to pit at Australia 1997, & perhaps even Mansell ignoring the team requests to save fuel when he was on his famous charge during the last few laps at Sliverstone 1987. IIRC I don’t think any of these driver ever got more than slapped wrists for their defiance?

In the case of Hamilton and Alonso in Hungary, was it not the case that, ultimately, the FIA chose to take the situation out of McLaren's hands before they could take any action against their drivers?
As for the case of Alesi in Australia 1997, one could argue that Alesi did effectively get a punishment by running out of fuel (which probably hurt him more than any punishment by the team could have). The case of Mansell in Silverstone in 1987 is also interesting, since it is suggested that that particular incident ended up with Honda throwing more of their support behind Piquet Sr. after they considered what Mansell did to have been excessively reckless (he almost blew his engine in the process too).
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

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mario wrote:
ibsey wrote:However lets not lose sight of the fact that it is not uncommon for drivers to ignore team orders as Mario has pointed out. In addition to his examples at Australia 2013, & off the top of my head, I can think of Hamiton ignore pit instructions to let his teammate by in Q3 at Hungary 2007, which then led to Alonso sitting in the pit box costing Hamilton’s his final run. Then there was Alesi ignore the team’s instruction to pit at Australia 1997, & perhaps even Mansell ignoring the team requests to save fuel when he was on his famous charge during the last few laps at Sliverstone 1987. IIRC I don’t think any of these driver ever got more than slapped wrists for their defiance?


In the case of Hamilton and Alonso in Hungary, was it not the case that, ultimately, the FIA chose to take the situation out of McLaren's hands before they could take any action against their drivers?
As for the case of Alesi in Australia 1997, one could argue that Alesi did effectively get a punishment by running out of fuel (which probably hurt him more than any punishment by the team could have). The case of Mansell in Silverstone in 1987 is also interesting, since it is suggested that that particular incident ended up with Honda throwing more of their support behind Piquet Sr. after they considered what Mansell did to have been excessively reckless (he almost blew his engine in the process too).


For Hungary 2007, As far as I am aware the FIA only handed out penalties to Alonso and the Mclaren team. I can’t ever recall them handing any kind of penalty to Hamilton for ignoring the team order in Q3, which then led to ‘pitlanegate’. Nor can I ever remember the Mclaren team ever taking any action against Lewis for his defiance in Q3 either at the time or subsequently. I searched on Wikipedia & all I could find on the matter was this;

Stewards later dropped Alonso five places down the starting grid of the race, putting him in sixth while Hamilton started in pole position. McLaren were also told they would lose any Constructor's Championship points they win in the race and wouldn't be presented with a winning constructor's trophy on the podium if one of their drivers were to win the race. The team stated Hamilton's hold-up was not Alonso's fault (although Alonso gave the stewards a different explanation, that he was inquiring about his tyres[3]), and that Hamilton had disobeyed team orders to let Alonso pass him, which put the two drivers out of sequence for their pit stops.[4] McLaren had initially expressed their intent to appeal the Constructor's points penalty but ultimately withdrew their appeal after subsequently losing all their Constructor's points as penalty for theespionage scandal.


Source; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Hunga ... Qualifying


For Australia 1997, yes that is true one could argue that. However I would say that the team paid perhaps an even greater punishment than Alesi did, from the lost WCC points that day. Because the team were in an extremely close WCC with Mclaren that season (who had finished 1st & 3rd in that particular race). So those lost points could have been extremely critical there indeed. In the WDC, because it became clear fairly early on in the 1997 season that Alesi wasn’t going to win the WDC. And because I consider Alesi similar to Gilles Villeneuve, in that he usually raced to win & not for points. Which is what he seemed to be doing in Australia 1997 (i.e. trying to get the big points by staying out that extra lap & taking the risk, rather than pitting & bagging the ‘safe’ points). I don’t think Jean would have cared an awful lot about those lost few points from Australia. So for me at least, that punishment of 3 (IIRC) lost WDC points doesn’t seem adequate enough to fit his crime (& this is coming from a massive Alesi fan).


For Sliverstone 1987 thanks for that little nugget of info, which I never knew before. Whilst an element of the suggestion you have put forward might be true. I don’t believe that had Mansell been less reckless at Sliverstone 1987. Then Honda would have given Nigel equal support. I base this opinion on a few quotes contain within an interesting article I recently read. First one is a quote from Alain Prost...

“I really wasn’t too upset that Senna won the title in ’88,” Alain said, “because I’d won it twice already by then. For ‘89, though, I was worried about Honda – I never had the relationship with them that Ayrton did, and the way they handled the situation was difficult for me, because Senna and I had very different driving styles. Before the season began I had dinner with Mr Kawamoto, the Honda chairman, and he admitted that Honda was more for Ayrtonb than for me – because they thought he was more the samurai, and I was more the computer!


Personally I would have considered Nigel “more the samurai” then Piquet ever was. Especially considering the Tifosi named him “il Leone” (the Lion) for his many dramatic performances, not least of all Sliverstone 1987.

“So that was an explanation, and I was happier, because part of my problem had been that Ayrton was so bloody quick, it wasn’t easy to know how much was that, and how much was Honda helping him… Of course people said I was paranoid – but I used to notice, for example, that at the French Grand Prix – my home race – I always seemed to get a very good engine, and there I would win without problem…
“By Monza in ‘89 I was about 10 points ahead of Senna in the championship, but I was leaving the team to go to Ferrari, and by then Honda was really hard against me: in qualifying Ayrton was nearly two seconds quicker – OK, he was certainly a better qualifier than I was, but two seconds… that was a joke!”

As a footnote, all I would add is that when, in 1985, Keke Rosberg informed Frank Williams he would be leaving Williams-Honda for McLaren-TAG (Porsche), he had not the slightest doubt that thereafter he had inferior engines from Honda, relative to Nigel Mansell: “I’m not stupid,” he said to me, “and I’m always honest with myself. I’ve been in this business long enough to know when I’m getting equal equipment, and when I’m not…” When Prost later began to say the same thing, Rosberg never doubted him.


Source; http://www.motorsportmagazine.com/ask_n ... t-mclaren/


So even before 1987, when one driver leaves Honda (like Rosberg in 1986). Honda then apparently supply that driver with inferior engines. IIRC according to the official 1987 F1 season review video, it was clear at Hockenhiem 1987 (i.e. the next race from Sliverstone) that Mclaren would get Williams supply of Honda engines for 1988.

EDIT: And that therefore Mansell would no longer be a Honda driver after 87. Whereas Piquet & Honda, must have had a fair idea there was a good chance they were staying together. As he announced his deal with Lotus Honda for 1988 at the next race Hungary 1987.

So I think the Mansell being too reckless at Sliverstone 1987, thus pushing Honda towards Piquet is little more than a convenient story.

In addition to the Reutmann example from 1981, kindly provided by FMecha I also just remember that (IIRC) Pironi never got punished for disobeying team orders at San Marino 1982, despite all the tragic after effects. Rubens never got punished for disobeying the inital instructions at Austria 2002 (even though he later gave way) And all of these cases are only the famous cases of drivers disobeying team orders that everybody knows about. Imagine how many more (non famous) cases lie under the surface.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Zetec »

Red Bull has obviously decided that Webber will not get a contract for 2014. That's what newspaper in Switzerland and Germany are claiming.

In a way it's sad. Vettel does shite, and Webber has to pay for it. On the other hand I'm happy, that Webber is finally out of that team. No one deserves that treatment.
And as I thought before: Red Bull has never reprimanded Vettel after the race, it is just what they say to the media.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by mediocre »

Well, Red Bull actually need Webber to get out of the way now. Mark has shown that he's quite a liability in terms of PR, Red Bull can't afford another stunt like this. And obviously, either Mark isn't quick enough to win the championship or Red Bull are not willing to make him win it (e.g. by giving Vettel better resources).
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Zetec »

mediocre wrote:And obviously, either Mark isn't quick enough to win the championship or Red Bull are not willing to make him win it.


The latter I think. Whoever will be his replacement, it won't be someone who will fight against Vettel for the championship.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by IceG »

Whither Wibbah?

He is a top driver without question. Perhaps too much of a team player to win the WDC but a surely positive asset for the WCC. So Ferrari for a year to replace Massa if Bianchi doesn't prove himself. Or Renault if Grosjean has lost his mojo along with his crashing habit, or if Kimi has got bored. McLaren if Perez doesn't deliver. Mercedes is sown up. None of the other teams are worthy IMHO.

Horner will reap what Mateschitz and Marko have sown. I can't see RB getting the WCC this year now and the WDC just got much harder. Plus they have to find a replacement for next year - in a team where the role is clearly not just No. 2 but to serve the No. 1 driver's agenda rather than the team's.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by DanielPT »

Zetec wrote:
mediocre wrote:And obviously, either Mark isn't quick enough to win the championship or Red Bull are not willing to make him win it.


The latter I think. Whoever will be his replacement, it won't be someone who will fight against Vettel for the championship.


He couldn't win the championship that is. He was well positioned in 2010 being the prime candidate but that driver error in Korea coupled with a very lacklustre last race and, unless someone proves me that he was hampered by the team, shows me that he bulked with pressure. After that, F1 changed to these Pirelli tyres and that hurt some drivers more that others and among those is Mark Webber. Also, If Red Bull wanted clear number 2 drivers they wouldn't have kept Mark after '10 and wouldn't had approached Lewis Hamilton.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by JJMonty »

DanielPT wrote:
Zetec wrote:
mediocre wrote:And obviously, either Mark isn't quick enough to win the championship or Red Bull are not willing to make him win it.


The latter I think. Whoever will be his replacement, it won't be someone who will fight against Vettel for the championship.


He couldn't win the championship that is. He was well positioned in 2010 being the prime candidate but that driver error in Korea coupled with a very lacklustre last race and, unless someone proves me that he was hampered by the team, shows me that he bulked with pressure. After that, F1 changed to these Pirelli tyres and that hurt some drivers more that others and among those is Mark Webber. Also, If Red Bull wanted clear number 2 drivers they wouldn't have kept Mark after '10 and wouldn't had approached Lewis Hamilton.


Webber didn't bulk under pressure. He had broken his leg (yet again in a cycling accident) before Korea - but kept it a secret from Red Bull until after the season.

Eitherway, he cost himself the championship with that crash in Korea - but having seen how average his driving was for the last few races of the year, that suggests to me that he was in a lot of discomfort for those final races.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by DanielPT »

JJMonty wrote:
Webber didn't bulk under pressure. He had broken his leg (yet again in a cycling accident) before Korea - but kept it a secret from Red Bull until after the season.

Eitherway, he cost himself the championship with that crash in Korea - but having seen how average his driving was for the last few races of the year, that suggests to me that he was in a lot of discomfort for those final races.


Actually it was a fractured shoulder. I don't deny that he might have driven in pain and not 100%, nevertheless he still finished 2nd both in Japan and Brazil (injury was before Japan) and managed to be 2nd and 3rd on the grid in both those races and in Korea. But I still believe Mark when he says that it didn't had any impact on the championship race.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by GwilymJJames »

This is an amusing read.

I'm not going to get any prizes for guessing what you all want to read about this week, am I? My team's decision to ask me not to try to pass Sebastian Vettel in the other Red Bull in the last four of five laps of the British Grand Prix.

I chose to race as hard and as fair as I thought was possible, trying my best to beat Seb. I got pretty close a couple of times but couldn't quite pull it off.

It was obviously a difficult situation, but I still feel comfortable about what I did.

In that situation, you are hit by conflicting emotions. You want to improve your position irrespective of who it is in front of you - especially when it is someone at Sebastian's level, whom you have to work pretty hard to get back on to.

To manage it but then be told to hold position is something I wasn't prepared to follow at the time. If I'd backed off and held the gap at three seconds, as I was asked to do, it would have been much more difficult for me to sleep after the race.

At the same time, I knew I was going against the team's wishes.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Divina_Galica »

GwilymJJames wrote:This is an amusing read.

I'm not going to get any prizes for guessing what you all want to read about this week, am I? My team's decision to ask me not to try to pass Sebastian Vettel in the other Red Bull in the last four of five laps of the British Grand Prix.

I chose to race as hard and as fair as I thought was possible, trying my best to beat Seb. I got pretty close a couple of times but couldn't quite pull it off.

It was obviously a difficult situation, but I still feel comfortable about what I did.

In that situation, you are hit by conflicting emotions. You want to improve your position irrespective of who it is in front of you - especially when it is someone at Sebastian's level, whom you have to work pretty hard to get back on to.

To manage it but then be told to hold position is something I wasn't prepared to follow at the time. If I'd backed off and held the gap at three seconds, as I was asked to do, it would have been much more difficult for me to sleep after the race.

At the same time, I knew I was going against the team's wishes.


....from the horse's mouth.....

Good find!

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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by ibsey »

Divina_Galica wrote:
GwilymJJames wrote:This is an amusing read.

I'm not going to get any prizes for guessing what you all want to read about this week, am I? My team's decision to ask me not to try to pass Sebastian Vettel in the other Red Bull in the last four of five laps of the British Grand Prix.

I chose to race as hard and as fair as I thought was possible, trying my best to beat Seb. I got pretty close a couple of times but couldn't quite pull it off.

It was obviously a difficult situation, but I still feel comfortable about what I did.

In that situation, you are hit by conflicting emotions. You want to improve your position irrespective of who it is in front of you - especially when it is someone at Sebastian's level, whom you have to work pretty hard to get back on to.

To manage it but then be told to hold position is something I wasn't prepared to follow at the time. If I'd backed off and held the gap at three seconds, as I was asked to do, it would have been much more difficult for me to sleep after the race.

At the same time, I knew I was going against the team's wishes.


....from the horse's mouth.....

Good find!

DG


After reading that, the question that immediately springs to mind is should Mark follow future team orders? And will he, given Mark probably now knows this is his last season at Red Bull?

I tend to think yes to both, as two wrongs don't make a right. Also by disobeying team orders now, it will ruin the reputation Mark has previously built for himself, over the last 10 years as an honest driver & team player. However if the WDC is stake at the final race of the season, I wouldn't blame Mark at all for screwing his teammate over to win it. However in that instance, it sounds like he might not sleep well knowing what he did was wrong. Based upon that article.

Sometimes the right thing is more important than a WDC, as evidenced by M Schumi at Adelaide 1994.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by DanielPT »

ibsey wrote:
GwilymJJames wrote:This is an amusing read.

I'm not going to get any prizes for guessing what you all want to read about this week, am I? My team's decision to ask me not to try to pass Sebastian Vettel in the other Red Bull in the last four of five laps of the British Grand Prix.

I chose to race as hard and as fair as I thought was possible, trying my best to beat Seb. I got pretty close a couple of times but couldn't quite pull it off.

It was obviously a difficult situation, but I still feel comfortable about what I did.

In that situation, you are hit by conflicting emotions. You want to improve your position irrespective of who it is in front of you - especially when it is someone at Sebastian's level, whom you have to work pretty hard to get back on to.

To manage it but then be told to hold position is something I wasn't prepared to follow at the time. If I'd backed off and held the gap at three seconds, as I was asked to do, it would have been much more difficult for me to sleep after the race.

At the same time, I knew I was going against the team's wishes.



After reading that, the question that immediately springs to mind is should Mark follow future team orders? And will he, given Mark probably now knows this is his last season at Red Bull?

I tend to think yes to both, as two wrongs don't make a right. Also by disobeying team orders now, it will ruin the reputation Mark has previously built for himself, over the last 10 years as an honest driver & team player. However if the WDC is stake at the final race of the season, I wouldn't blame Mark at all for screwing his teammate over to win it. However in that instance, it sounds like he might not sleep well knowing what he did was wrong. Based upon that article.

Sometimes the right thing is more important than a WDC, as evidenced by M Schumi at Adelaide 1994.


Have you read the article right, ibsey? That is about Webber not following team orders in Britain 2011. And he feels comfortable about it. From the looks of it, it was Mark who started the whole disobeying orders thing (which he probably felt entitled to, given that Vettel was and is being protected by the team) with the difference that he wasn't trounced by the press. Although, like you said, two wrongs don't make a right so this doesn't excuse Vettel disobeying on his own.

Spot the differences from BBC:
2011 wrote:Mark Webber frustrated by team orders


2013 wrote:Sebastian Vettel ignores team orders to beat Mark Webber


'Nuff said.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by LellaLombardi »

Very good point - when Webber disobeyed team orders at Silverstone he was seen as edgy, gritty, sticking it to the man, especially by the BBC. Vettel get accused of behaving like a spoilt brat - is it because he's younger? Seems like double standards to me. It's never good when driver's dads start getting involved as Webber Snr has just done on the BBC. They're hardly going to have an unexpected opinion and come on, these drivers are grown men, why do they need their Dads butting in?
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by mario »

Zetec wrote:Red Bull has obviously decided that Webber will not get a contract for 2014. That's what newspaper in Switzerland and Germany are claiming.

In a way it's sad. Vettel does shite, and Webber has to pay for it. On the other hand I'm happy, that Webber is finally out of that team. No one deserves that treatment.
And as I thought before: Red Bull has never reprimanded Vettel after the race, it is just what they say to the media.

It may not necessarily be just because Red Bull want to dismiss Webber - Briatore said that he could not envisage Red Bull's current line up lasing beyond the end of this year, and with the combination of Webber's advancing age (he turns 37 this year and is the oldest driver in the field by quite some way), it is possible that Mark has decided to walk out of the team and into retirement on his own initiative.
I do think, though, that one of Briatore's comments on Red Bull does hit home hard - that it is a team that is being run by the drivers, not the team manager, given that both drivers have now publicly flouted team orders.

LellaLombardi wrote:Very good point - when Webber disobeyed team orders at Silverstone he was seen as edgy, gritty, sticking it to the man, especially by the BBC. Vettel get accused of behaving like a spoilt brat - is it because he's younger? Seems like double standards to me. It's never good when driver's dads start getting involved as Webber Snr has just done on the BBC. They're hardly going to have an unexpected opinion and come on, these drivers are grown men, why do they need their Dads butting in?

In that instance, I think that perhaps there was an element of prejudice against Vettel and the team management given what had happened in 2010 - such as the switching of front wings in the 2010 British GP - which probably meant that quite a few people saw Webber's defiance of the team orders as striking back against a perceived bias of the team towards Vettel. It may be that slight "underdog" aspect that meant that quite a few people were willing to back Webber up and, in the case of the BBC, I imagine that, try as he might, given Coulthard has been both a team mate and friend of Webber for a number of years and may inevitably be influenced, directly or indirectly, by that.
Flip that situation around, therefore, and I suppose that there would be those that might feel that Vettel's decision to disregard the team orders, plus the expectation that Red Bull would not take any severe action against him, feeds, rightly or wrongly, into that image of Vettel as the "protected one" within the team.

Equally, I think that there may be an element of mistrust about Vettel within some sections of the press over his public persona - I know that the photographer Darren Heath, for example, has claimed on more than one occasion that he feels that Vettel's "happy go lucky" persona is a calculated image that he puts on for the press to sweeten his image and that Vettel's true persona is harsher, more ruthless and calculating than he portrays himself in the public eye. I think that there may be a few within the press who wonder whether Vettel's public persona is entirely honest or not, and that slight uncertainty about his character probably does create a slightly negative association about him, such that any unsavoury activities are likely to rankle ever more sharply against his public image.

Webber, for both good and bad, seems to be perceived by the press to be a fairly honest person and the sort of person who wouldn't bother to sweeten the pill, even if he knows that it may hurt those around him to. I imagine that there might be those within the press that admire, to use the old phrase, the "publish and be damned" attitude of Webber, and the fact that he has had to battle his way into F1 (having had to beg for money at one point to continue his career). Vettel, who has had the full support (both in terms of contacts and sheer spending power) of Red Bull's Young Driver Program from almost the beginning of his career, perhaps has an image of entitlement around him that contrasts all the more sharply with the image of the hard grafting Australian, which probably exacerbates the negative image that he is given in the press at times.

DanielPT wrote:
JJMonty wrote:
Webber didn't bulk under pressure. He had broken his leg (yet again in a cycling accident) before Korea - but kept it a secret from Red Bull until after the season.

Eitherway, he cost himself the championship with that crash in Korea - but having seen how average his driving was for the last few races of the year, that suggests to me that he was in a lot of discomfort for those final races.


Actually it was a fractured shoulder. I don't deny that he might have driven in pain and not 100%, nevertheless he still finished 2nd both in Japan and Brazil (injury was before Japan) and managed to be 2nd and 3rd on the grid in both those races and in Korea. But I still believe Mark when he says that it didn't had any impact on the championship race.

As an aside, I have to wonder what was going through Webber's mind in the Korean GP, since he did seem somewhat agitated throughout that race. There were the despondent messages he gave to the team and race control, plus the rather animated discussion he had with Mylander during the red flag period (he spent quite a bit of time talking with him about the conditions and was quite strongly against continuing to race). It seemed as if, somehow, his heart really wasn't in that race long before he crashed out, almost as if crashing out was something of a relief to him given that he was going backwards through the field at the time.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by ibsey »

DanielPT wrote:Have you read the article right, ibsey? That is about Webber not following team orders in Britain 2011. And he feels comfortable about it. From the looks of it, it was Mark who started the whole disobeying orders thing (which he probably felt entitled to, given that Vettel was and is being protected by the team) with the difference that he wasn't trounced by the press. Although, like you said, two wrongs don't make a right so this doesn't excuse Vettel disobeying on his own.


Oh... My Bad. Only just glanced at it & assumed it was about Webber sticking to team orders. So I had gotten completely the wrong end of the stick. :oops: :oops: :oops: Apologies & thanks for pointing that out DanielPT and lesson learnt for the future there.

In that case I take back what I said. Particularly about Webber being an honest driver & team player. Surely he must still have remembered his defiance of team orders from Sliverstone 2011 at last weekend’s GP, yet never mentioned this in any interviews as far as I am aware. In fact IIRC Lee Mckenzie on the BBC asked Mark a question, which involved her mentioning how Mark apparently stood by team orders at Sliverstone 2011. And how that must have made Mark especially angry in light of Seb's actions at Sepang. Yet Mark never came clean then. So is Webber more politically / PR minded than we give him credit for?

Based upon that article, I completely agree with you, in that it was Mark who started the whole disobeying orders thing. Unless of course there was an even earlier example that we currently don’t know about where Vettel was in the wrong. I was tempted initially to say Vettel’s defiance was slightly worse since he actually took points of Webber. However it appears that Mark was still trying his hardest to pass Vettel (judging from the last lap & the way Webber was saving his KERS to attack Vettel out of Woodcote). So Sliverstone 2011 seems equally as bad then.

This soap opera is getting better by the day. I can’t wait for the next instalment, to hear what Webber has to say for himself when someone points out his defiance of team orders and above comments from Sliverstone 2011. Seems only a matter of time now, before this whole mess ends up on something like the Jerry Springer show, where we learn that Seb is actually the love child of Helmut Marko & Christian Horner. :lol:

mario wrote:I think that there may be a few within the press who wonder whether Vettel's public persona is entirely honest or not, and that slight uncertainty about his character probably does create a slightly negative association about him, such that any unsavoury activities are likely to rankle ever more sharply against his public image.


Also i’m guessing the media would particular love to paint Vettel as a hate figure, given his successes in the last few years. Since that makes him naturally more well known to Joe Public. Also for the way he is so, apparently clean cut & never seemingly gets into trouble during his free time i.e. can’t ever recall a story about Vettel coming out of a strip bar at 5am...or pictures of him off his head etc, (like a certain Finish driver we all know & love). It seems to be a fact of life that stories like this will sell more newspapers & magazines etc.
Last edited by ibsey on 28 Mar 2013, 00:59, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

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LellaLombardi wrote:Very good point - when Webber disobeyed team orders at Silverstone he was seen as edgy, gritty, sticking it to the man, especially by the BBC. Vettel get accused of behaving like a spoilt brat - is it because he's younger? Seems like double standards to me.

It's not double standards when one does something and then sticks to his guns on the issue, while the other goes ahead and does the deed, then issues a very lacklustre fake apology afterwards. If you are going to make a bold move, see it through and not wimp out like a f***ing pansy as Vettel has done here. The way he handled himself afterwards is what caused the backlash, it was pathetic and one of the worst lies I've ever seen.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by S951 »

Stramala [kostas22] wrote:
LellaLombardi wrote:Very good point - when Webber disobeyed team orders at Silverstone he was seen as edgy, gritty, sticking it to the man, especially by the BBC. Vettel get accused of behaving like a spoilt brat - is it because he's younger? Seems like double standards to me.

It's not double standards when one does something and then sticks to his guns on the issue, while the other goes ahead and does the deed, then issues a very lacklustre fake apology afterwards. If you are going to make a bold move, see it through and not wimp out like a f***ing pansy as Vettel has done here. The way he handled himself afterwards is what caused the backlash, it was pathetic and one of the worst lies I've ever seen.


stramala kostas sums it up pretty well here
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by DanielPT »

ibsey wrote:
Oh... My Bad. Only just glanced at it & assumed it was about Webber sticking to team orders. So I had gotten completely the wrong end of the stick. :oops: :oops: :oops: Apologies & thanks for pointing that out DanielPT and lesson learnt for the future there.



No problem ibsey! :) I just found your answer a bit weird for the quotation in question!


Stramala [kostas22] wrote:
LellaLombardi wrote:Very good point - when Webber disobeyed team orders at Silverstone he was seen as edgy, gritty, sticking it to the man, especially by the BBC. Vettel get accused of behaving like a spoilt brat - is it because he's younger? Seems like double standards to me.

It's not double standards when one does something and then sticks to his guns on the issue, while the other goes ahead and does the deed, then issues a very lacklustre fake apology afterwards. If you are going to make a bold move, see it through and not wimp out like a f***ing pansy as Vettel has done here. The way he handled himself afterwards is what caused the backlash, it was pathetic and one of the worst lies I've ever seen.


Can't agree with you there stramala. Vettel was already receiving stick before he came up with his 'fake' apology. You can see by some posts in this forum at the moment. Obviously, given the VETTELWINSLOL moniker and the fact that we like to root for the underdog that people instantly sided with Mark, me included. I don't know if his apology was fake or he was genuinely surprised in having upset so many people and tried to mend his hand almost immediately. Like we have shown, people didn't reacted this way when was Mark doing it (and failing to do so which probably helped in not receiving such flak). It still looks like double standards to me, but it is no wonder since Red Bull always looked so biased towards Vettel...
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by lgaquino »

Stramala [kostas22] wrote:it was pathetic and one of the worst lies I've ever seen.


It reminds me of hamilton lying about passing [or being instructed to pass] trulli during the SC period, in melbourne '09.
I believe mclaren told him to lie, but he received some flak for doing so....and then ppl soon forgot about it.

Sort of expect the same to happen as the season progresses
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by DemocalypseNow »

DanielPT wrote:
Stramala [kostas22] wrote:
LellaLombardi wrote:Very good point - when Webber disobeyed team orders at Silverstone he was seen as edgy, gritty, sticking it to the man, especially by the BBC. Vettel get accused of behaving like a spoilt brat - is it because he's younger? Seems like double standards to me.

It's not double standards when one does something and then sticks to his guns on the issue, while the other goes ahead and does the deed, then issues a very lacklustre fake apology afterwards. If you are going to make a bold move, see it through and not wimp out like a f***ing pansy as Vettel has done here. The way he handled himself afterwards is what caused the backlash, it was pathetic and one of the worst lies I've ever seen.


Can't agree with you there stramala. Vettel was already receiving stick before he came up with his 'fake' apology. You can see by some posts in this forum at the moment. Obviously, given the VETTELWINSLOL moniker and the fact that we like to root for the underdog that people instantly sided with Mark, me included. I don't know if his apology was fake or he was genuinely surprised in having upset so many people and tried to mend his hand almost immediately. Like we have shown, people didn't reacted this way when was Mark doing it (and failing to do so which probably helped in not receiving such flak). It still looks like double standards to me, but it is no wonder since Red Bull always looked so biased towards Vettel...

It's not my fault if other people undeservedly give Vettel stick for overtaking someone. From my perspective, I wasn't bothered by what had happened until Vettel started crying about how he was sorry for his actions and so on. If people were pissed off before any of that, well, frankly, they are biased and completely in the wrong here. But watching Vettel sit there and talk bullshit was what made me quite angry. It's disgraceful that after witnessing all we did, he decided to conduct himself the way he did. Either you follow team orders or you break then and stick to your actions, rather than bailing and getting away scot-free, because you know the team has your back. In a very strange way, it's almost like public backstabbing. But I guess, as many people have said over the years, backstabbing is how people succeed in Formula One...
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

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Stramala [kostas22] wrote:It's not my fault if other people undeservedly give Vettel stick for overtaking someone. From my perspective, I wasn't bothered by what had happened until Vettel started crying about how he was sorry for his actions and so on. If people were pissed off before any of that, well, frankly, they are biased and completely in the wrong here. But watching Vettel sit there and talk bullshit was what made me quite angry. It's disgraceful that after witnessing all we did, he decided to conduct himself the way he did. Either you follow team orders or you break then and stick to your actions, rather than bailing and getting away scot-free, because you know the team has your back. In a very strange way, it's almost like public backstabbing. But I guess, as many people have said over the years, backstabbing is how people succeed in Formula One...


I thought you were speaking in general. It is obvious that what I wrote doesn't apply then. My apologies.

I must say though, that, since I became more politically involved (as in following more closely what politics do and why) I have increasingly grown tolerant to backstabbing and lying, unfortunately. So it is not that I don't care about it any more, but it becomes less important.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

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Ive just been reading some quotes attributed to Helmut Marko claiming Vettel was "distressed" after Sundays events and looking again at his immediate reaction my belief is that it had caught him by surprise, like a little boy caught with his hand in the cookie jar. I think he expected some heavy grief from Webber and the media but for his team to appear really unhappy with him for the first time I think has jarred him somewhat. He's been the boy who could do no wrong for years and for a short time a least he found himself on the naughty step.

Perhaps by now it will have sunk in that what little help Webber may have given him towards the end of the season has now evaporated.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by ibsey »

Stramala [kostas22] wrote:If you are going to make a bold move, see it through and not wimp out like a f***ing pansy as Vettel has done here.


Isn’t Mark the bigger hypocrite here, for ‘wimping’ out from his bold stance from Sliverstone 2011 (& possibly Brazil 2012) about being against team orders. Yet suddenly when they are benefiting him, he seems all for team orders?

I say possibly Brazil 2012, because I’ve been hearing a bit about how Webber disobeyed team orders in Brazil 2012. Although I am not 100% where the alleged incident is said to have occurred (perhaps someone could kindly advise?). From a recent thread within the Autosport forum someone had asked that very question & citied when Webber went to pass Vettel was at the re-start, as a possibility. For ease I will simply copy extracts from the thread...

Horner has stated -

Asked what Vettel meant when he said he had not passed Webber deliberately, Horner said: "He felt he hadn't heard the call. That it was unclear to him what the instruction was. But then again, we had the same thing in Brazil the other way around.


and

If you think of Brazil at the last race, Mark was told to hold position and started racing him. Now, these things happen.


My only recollection of anything where Webber went to pass Vettel was at the re-start and my thinking on that is what a wrote in another thread....

If he (Horner) is talking about the restart then that was solely down to Vettel being asleep **. Kobayashi passed Webber on the inside, Webber moved to the outside and blocked the Force India that was coming up. Webber then bailed out of Turn 1 (which cost him positions) so that he would leave room for Vettel.

If you don't believe me....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvJEy8PgIoc at 1:28

Other than the start I can not think of another incident.

** ThomFi has pointed out that Vettel was not asleep as I put it but was infact running a reduced engine map (which I did not know)

"So we changed the engine mapping to try and minimise the exhaust temperature. We lost a bit of performance in the process and just tried to get it home."



Source: http://forums.autosport.com/index.php?showtopic=183773


In addition, I’ve read a few posts somewhere amongst most of the c##p contained within the Autosport threads which suggests that at Hungary 2010. It was in fact the team’s fault that Vettel got his drive through penalty at that race. Since they failed to notify / remind Vettel to stay within 10 car lengths of the SC when he was trying help Webber’s strategy in that race. However despite this, afterwards Vettel took all the blame for the incident & not said as he might have been entitled to, that the team were at fault. So I think Hungary 2010 shows us that perhaps Vettel is more of a team player than most people give him credit for. But also that Seb was initially prepared to follow Red Bull team orders (even if that meant helping one of his main WDC rivals... aka Webber). Until of course Mark disobeyed team orders in Sliverstone 2011.

Also given everything that has now come to light, about this matter (i.e. Sliverstone 2011 & Brazil 2012 etc). I now starting to wonder whether Vettel’s ‘lacklustre fake apology’. Was in fact a genuine apology by him. However it may have seemed lacklustre or fake, simply because Vettel was very confused when he made it at the sort of re-action he was getting from the press & the sort of questions he was asked at the time. Particularly considering when Webber ignored team orders either he was treated as hero for doing so or barely anything was made of it. So one can understand why Vettel would be extremely confused when trying to apologise over his actions in Malaysia. In any case, at least Vettel has tried to apologise over his actions afterwards. Did Mark ever apologise to Vettel for Sliverstone 2011? Or did Vettel ever try to publicly slate Webber or the team for their actions then?

Finally I would like to remind everyone of their respective ages. Vettel age is what... 25 years old? (IIRC) Whereas Webber age is 37 years old (again IIRC). So one would expect Webber to have had more life experience than Vettel & know better than to be a hypocrite. Also I eluded in my last post that I thought Webber might be more politically / PR minded than we give him credit for? Thinking about this a little more, His "not bad for a no. 2 driver" message after Sliverstone 2010 was certainly well timed to ensure maximum public sympathy for his cause. So indeed it does make you wonder about this?

Before anyone wonders, I’m just a neutral observer on this who is just trying to get to the bottom of the matter like most people. So I’m not a fan of either driver. Which I think can be proven from my posts here yesterday I, like most people, was heavily defending Webber. Whereas in light of his apparent hypocrisy, I am tending to understand Vettel’s side more now.
Last edited by ibsey on 28 Mar 2013, 16:01, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by madmark1974 »

James Allen's race report comes to an interesting conclusion :

At the final stop something very unusual happened; having been given the stop preference throughout the race, coming in a lap earlier than Vettel for the second and third stops, Webber was then disadvantaged at the final stop.

He was brought in a lap later than his team-mate who pitted on Lap 42. Prior to this Webber had enjoyed a 4.2 second lead. However after exiting the pits on new hard tyres on lap 43 he found that Vettel was now 0.5s behind him on the faster new mediums. If Webber had stopped first he would have increased his lead.

So by stopping Vettel first, the team artificially set up the circumstance for what then happened, with Vettel choosing to attack and pass.


The suggestion is that Red Bull gave Vettel every chance to get ahead of Webber during the last stops and take the win 'naturally', but then called him off when it didn't work out.
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Re: The Alex Yoong 2013 Malaysian GP Thread

Post by Jocke1 »

madmark1974 wrote:The suggestion is that Red Bull gave Vettel every chance to get ahead of Webber during the last stops and take the win 'naturally', but then called him off when it didn't work out.

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