Row Man Gross-Gene wrote: ↑04 Nov 2024, 16:25
Salamander wrote: ↑04 Nov 2024, 16:12
Row Man Gross-Gene wrote: ↑04 Nov 2024, 16:00
I'm probably in the minority here (and I can be convinced otherwise) but I think fines were a sufficient punishment for the people who violated the starting grid rules in this instance. Beyond that I'm not sure what all Race Control and the stewards might have done to deserve ROTR. It seemed pretty standard to me.
Well, nobody seemed to have any clue what was going on at the start, which is complete failure on their part to communicate what should be happening. Besides that, the severe delays to bring out red flags during qualifying when cars crashed was inexcusable.
Red flags being delayed could be a serious issue, fair enough. Unfortunately I fell asleep about 3 minutes into qualifying so I never saw those instances. When it comes to the start issues, I wonder if the teams were really more at fault for not knowing the procedures than Race control for not making them known? I mean, multiple drivers on the grid knew they shouldn't be leaving, how did they know what the right procedure was? That said, it was a mess that didn't make F1 look terribly good, but nothing like some very stupid past shenanigans.
Still for me, Stroll is the most rejectful in the old-fashioned Jamie and Enoch way.
The main complaint came from those questioning whether the red flags should have been deployed sooner for Stroll's accident in qualifying and complaining that race control was quicker to deploy them for other accidents. Some were claiming that, for Sainz, the red flag came out 27 seconds after the crash, whilst for Stroll it apparently took 52 seconds, with some deeming that to be too long to react.
Following Q2, Verstappen was then complaining about how long it took for the red flags to be shown, which resulted in a number of fans pushing the conspiracy theory that the red flag was delayed in Q2 to enable other drivers to set a better time in Q2 than Verstappen and thus ensure that he would go out.
Now, the conspiracy theory falls apart as soon as you look at the timing data - Leclerc knocked Verstappen out of Q2 within 2 seconds of Stroll's crash, so even a relatively quick decision to bring out the red flag wouldn't have saved Verstappen. However, whilst there may be some legitimate criticisms of race control, there does also seem to have been a deliberate fanning of the flames by some parties to push a particular agenda towards the FIA and to exaggerate the criticism of them.
IceG wrote: ↑04 Nov 2024, 08:09
Been waiting for the outcomes of the stewards' investigations before commenting.
RoTR for me is undoubtedly Race Control and the Stewards.
(1) Russell, Norris and Tsunoda should have received AT LEAST 10 second penalties for leaving the grid when the aborted start sign came up. Not only did they break a procedure that the rest of the grid managed to follow, their actions resulted in cars driving round in the wet whilst a car was being recovered. I was expecting an exclusion for both Russell and Norris - once they had gone it was inevitable that everyone would have to go round again.
With respect to the confusion over Norris mistakenly thinking that race control had asked for an additional formation lap, rather than aborting the start - it's been pointed out that, during the 2023 Italian GP, Carlos Sainz made the same mistake and pulled away from the grid on an additional formation lap when the race director showed the "aborted start" signal on the lighting gantry after Tsunoda broke down on the formation lap.
In that particular case, race control then ordered the drivers to proceed round on another formation lap, but once they returned to the grid, race control then switched back to following the procedures for an aborted start instead. In that instance, Sainz received no penalty for his actions and race control did not even investigate him for incorrectly pulling away and making the field do another formation lap instead.
It's therefore quite possible that Norris, Russell and Tsunoda all mistakenly thought that, by copying what Sainz did the last time there was an aborted start, they were doing the right thing.