Zetec wrote:It was a stupid move, but:
"any driver defending his position on a straight and before any braking area may use the full width of the track during his first move provided no significant portion of the car attempting to pass is alongside his. Whilst defending in this way the driver may not leave the track without justifiable reason. For the avoidance of doubt, if any part of the front wing of the car attempting to pass is alongside the rear wheel of the car in front this will be deemed to be a 'significant portion'."
So, reading stewards clarification, it means, by the time Perez was alongside with his frontwing (0:54), Raikkönen being not on the racing line by then, shouldn't have turned in the corner.
Perez's move was far too optimistic, though because of the nature of the circuit, any pass is going to be "do or die" and so Perez was just doing what he had done before. Some of the moves worked, some didn't - though by the time he had a collision with Raikkonen, he was pushing his luck!
However.... Kimi could have avoided that accident, even if he kept the door open, there would have been enough room for him to stay within the confines of the track and then be able to shut the door on Perez through the switchback on the exit of the corner.
Having looked at another video with Audio - Perez was on the brakes before Raikkonen started moving over, so Perez had already committed to overtaking and braking before RAI responded - so Perez could not have slowed down any quicker. On the external shot of the link above, you can see Raikkonen is looking in his mirrors, he knew Perez was there yet turned in, though as an experienced racer, he should know the nature of overtaking in to that corner "do or die", if you see someone in your mirrors closing up, you know they can't slow down anymore - you can't just turn in on them and expect them to disappear into dust!
As I said, Perez was pushing his luck but Raikkonen could have avoided that accident - Alonso and Button managed to.