![Embarrassed :oops:](./images/smilies/icon_redface.gif)
Mclaren Yes Button won, but my didnt they have so many problems like hitting other cars and themselfs, I see Hamilton & Button not being Buddys now
Paul Di Resta Your biggest fan is so upset now seeing you ruin a possible top 5 finish
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_e_sad.gif)
razta wrote:Also ROTR Double DRS zone, for Robbing Michael Schumacher of a Schu-win OVER DUE COMEBACK VICTORY!
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
QuickYoda41 wrote:Track marshall - after all, it was the most threatening moment
GroupLotusRenault wrote:Rihanna for being in a F1 pitlane when she said she doesn even know what F1 means (I do like her music and her)
DanielPT wrote:Life usually expires after 400 meters and always before reaching 2 laps or so. In essence, Life is short.
The Mountain Man wrote:1)Whoever had the bright idea of putting up those concrete barriers Nick Heidefeld almost crashed into after his front wing exploded. Major kudos to Nick for avoiding them with a superhuman effort.
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
Captain Hammer wrote:Actually, looking back, I think the clear winner is Fernando Alonso for giving up.
Quick recap: we saw the yellow flags go out, and the camera picked up a stricken Ferrari at turn four. The TV director managed to find footage of the incident, and we saw it from two or three angles. Cut back to real-time, and the Ferrari is completely deserted. I expected to see tumbleweeds. As the commentators pointed out, Alonso could have rejoined the race with a push from the trackside marshalls. The back end did end up in the barriers, but it was only a light touch and there was no visible damage. The only way to tell for sure would have been for Alonso to rejoin the race. Yet, in the twenty or thirty seconds that it had taken for the replays to be shown, Alonso had completely abanoned his car. It's not the first time he's done this, either - he had a low-speed spin at Spa last year with no real damage (anything he had was completely cosmetic), and yet jumped ship almost straight away.
The "most complete driver on the grid"? My muscular buttocks he is.
Captain Hammer wrote:The Mountain Man wrote:1)Whoever had the bright idea of putting up those concrete barriers Nick Heidefeld almost crashed into after his front wing exploded. Major kudos to Nick for avoiding them with a superhuman effort.
They're not concrete. They're just regular crash barriers designed to stop a car from going down the access road at speed.
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
Captain Hammer wrote:I don't think Kobayashi brke-tested Heidfeld. We saw both Heidfeld and Petrov display excellent traction in the changing conditions; far better than the Sauber. Heidfeld just over-estimated the amount of traction Kobayashi had simply because he himself was used to
having so much.
Ferrim wrote:I've previously nominated race control, but what about... Vettel?
I noticed during the race that he pulled away pretty fast, but then proceded to slow down A LOT. He pulled away from the Ferraris at the beginning at over 1 second a lap, but then the gap stabilised. He pulled twice from Kobayashi I think, but when he was some five seconds ahead he would stop pushing. He again pulled away ridiculously fast after the final SC period.
At that point I had already forgotten about the fight for the win, and I was rooting for Schumacher to keep his podium spot. After a couple of laps where Webber's mistakes allowed Michael to retain second place, I saw what looked to me like a backmarker a few seconds in front of the Mercedes. I thought: "let's hope that helps Schumi to build a small gap". But the backmarker never came, I saw him again a couple of times and the gap was still more or less the same than before. I didn't pay much attention to that until Button got past Schumacher and suddenly started to close the gap on Vettel, who was just a few seconds ahead.
Of course, the "backmarker" I had seen before was no other than Vettel himself! He spent several laps just trolling around the track at a much slower pace than he could. I'm looking at the lap times and he was lapping in 1:20s, went down to 1:19 in lap 66 and the following three laps, when Button was already pushing, he started lapping in 1:17s. You could see that he was completely at the limit in every corner, sliding very close to the walls a few times -the last one, just before his spin- while Button looked like he was on rails. But if Vettel had been lapping during the previous laps in the 1:18-1:19, over a second slower than the pace he had, he would have been +10s ahead when Button passed Schumacher and would have won the race easily.
Dr. Helmut Marko wrote: Finally we have an Australian in the team who can start a race well and challenge Vettel.
Code: Select all
14:03 RaikkonenPlsCare There's some water in water
Captain Hammer wrote:The 107% rule is like the microphone at a Britney Spears concert - it just doesn't matter.
QuickYoda41 wrote:Track marshall - after all, it was the most threatening moment
Shizuka wrote:I nominate the ENTIRE field.
Virtually all drivers had their moments. The stewards too. And seeing how they tried to clean the track... uh.
Dr. Helmut Marko wrote: Finally we have an Australian in the team who can start a race well and challenge Vettel.
golic_2004 wrote:QuickYoda41 wrote:Track marshall - after all, it was the most threatening moment
Yes it was.
Did Heidfeld run in to the back of Kobayashi? If so then ROTR to him.
The Stewards have reviewed the Incident involving Car 3 (L. Hamilton) and Car 4 (J. Button) on their 7th lap of the race. The Stewards reviewed the lines of several cars, including the two cars involved, using multiple angles of video evidence over several laps, the speed traces of both drivers, the GPS tracking data from the cars and have heard the drivers and team representatives.
The Stewards concluded that:
1) Exiting Turn 13 there was a legitimate overtaking opportunity for Lewis Hamilton as his speed was greater than Jensen Button's.
2) Both drivers took lines substantially similar to many of the other drivers, and did not move as far to the left as the preceding driver, Michael Schumacher. At the moment after Hamilton moved to the left to pass, Button looked into his mirror. It appears from the position of Hamilton at that moment [and is confirmed by the drivers] that Button was unlikely to have seen Hamilton.
3) At the point of contact Button had not yet moved as far to the left of the track as he had on the previous lap, or that Schumacher had on that lap.
The Stewards have concluded that it was reasonable for Hamilton to believe that Button would have seen him and that he could have made the passing manoeuvre. Further, the Stewards have concluded that it is reasonable to believe that Button was not aware of Hamilton’s position to his left.
Therefore, the Stewards decide that this was a “racing incident” and have taken no further action
jpm wrote:Jenson Button won the race beacuse of Narian Karthikeyan. Let me explain. Massa was ahead of Schumacher after the pitstops, but lost out on cold slicks, but was still ahead of Webber. At that moment, the trio came upon the lapped HRT, which slithered off the road on the very corner Vettel later lost the race at, leaving Martin Brundle to exclaim that he had been "frightened off the road." Karthikeyan trickled back on in front of Massa, and in taking avoiding action, taps the wall, allowing the HRT to 'power' past again, only to go flying off the road at the very next corner again. As Massa is now going so slowly, Webber passes, and manages to negotiate the HRT as it comes back onto the track fro a second time, whilst Massa has to come to a complete stop to avoid running into the back of him for a second time. This slows him sufficiently to mean that Massa comes out of the pits behind Button, therefore robbing us of a 4 car battle for second between 4 different cars. However, the flip side of this was that had Massa been in Button's way as well, he would likely not have caught Vettel in time (a welcome change!)
P_Friesacher wrote:I nominate the crowd in Canada. This might seem surprising, so please let me explain.
Nice as it was for them to stay when it started to rain so heavily - why did they have to boo Vettel on the podium? Cheering for Button - great, I did that, too. It was a well deserved victory, probably the best one in quite some time. But I just couldn't understand why they disapproved of Vettel so much - I don't think he had done anything unsporting the whole weekend (and I'm hard pressed to find anything in his whole career). He had just lost the Grand Prix - gracefully, in my opinion.
So - can anyone explain? (This is an honest question - I'd really be interested to know. I'll withdraw the nomination if anyone can!)
mario wrote:
It must be noted that this might be in part due to the particularly aggressive retarded ignition mapping Renault uses - Heidfeld would have probably had significantly more rear traction than Kobayashi (as Sauber are, I believe, not running a retarded ignition engine map), so he probably underestimated how little grip Kobayashi had
DemocalypseNow wrote: when eagleash of all people says you've gone too far about something you just know that's when to apply the brakes and do a U-turn.
nigellamansell wrote:1 - The pit lane cameraman who fell in front of Rihanna
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
Collieafc wrote:and J Washburn Stokers avatar...
nigellamansell wrote:[quote="Captain Hammer]How about the trackside marshall who fell in front of Petrov?[/quote]
I completely forgot about him. That was a seriously scary moment.[/quote]
howardmb wrote:nigellamansell wrote:[quote="Captain Hammer]How about the trackside marshall who fell in front of Petrov?[/quote]
I completely forgot about him. That was a seriously scary moment.[/quote][/quote]
Can anyone tell me when this happened? I regret to say I missed it.[/quote]
Jeroen Krautmeir wrote:Two or three guys (can't remember) were 'clearing' the debris from Nick Heidfeld's front wing, and some fellow tumbled on track. It had me laughing for a moment, but then it was just getting ridiculous when he fell the second time. He really could have been steamrolled.
Biscione wrote:"Some Turkemenistani gulag repurposed for residential use" is the best way yet I've heard to describe North / East Glasgow.
Wizzie wrote:Then it got really scary when Petrov came steaming in at about a million miles an hour before just pulling up infront of the debris field.
redbulljack14 wrote:Captain Hammer wrote:The 107% rule is like the microphone at a Britney Spears concert - it just doesn't matter.
That is my new sig.
I'll go with 107% rule as well for ROTR.
DanielPT wrote:Ferrim wrote:I've previously nominated race control, but what about... Vettel?
I noticed during the race that he pulled away pretty fast, but then proceded to slow down A LOT. He pulled away from the Ferraris at the beginning at over 1 second a lap, but then the gap stabilised. He pulled twice from Kobayashi I think, but when he was some five seconds ahead he would stop pushing. He again pulled away ridiculously fast after the final SC period.
At that point I had already forgotten about the fight for the win, and I was rooting for Schumacher to keep his podium spot. After a couple of laps where Webber's mistakes allowed Michael to retain second place, I saw what looked to me like a backmarker a few seconds in front of the Mercedes. I thought: "let's hope that helps Schumi to build a small gap". But the backmarker never came, I saw him again a couple of times and the gap was still more or less the same than before. I didn't pay much attention to that until Button got past Schumacher and suddenly started to close the gap on Vettel, who was just a few seconds ahead.
Of course, the "backmarker" I had seen before was no other than Vettel himself! He spent several laps just trolling around the track at a much slower pace than he could. I'm looking at the lap times and he was lapping in 1:20s, went down to 1:19 in lap 66 and the following three laps, when Button was already pushing, he started lapping in 1:17s. You could see that he was completely at the limit in every corner, sliding very close to the walls a few times -the last one, just before his spin- while Button looked like he was on rails. But if Vettel had been lapping during the previous laps in the 1:18-1:19, over a second slower than the pace he had, he would have been +10s ahead when Button passed Schumacher and would have won the race easily.
Totally agreed. He thought he had the race in the bag and then, when he saw Button he panicked, overpushed and went wide. For someone who was having a perfect season that was a mighty rejectful. If he had the pace why settling 3secs ahead? Why leave himself open to nasty surprises? If it was Mansell or Senna they would've driven off into the distance. Well, I guess that he will learn for the next time.