Dave
Honorary Master
I disagree - many athletes have had their medals and championships stripped. Why should F1 be any different?
I just see it as doing more harm than good, would Hamilton even want the title under those conditions?
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I disagree - many athletes have had their medals and championships stripped. Why should F1 be any different?
enough of a deterrent
If you consider that the FIA still hasn't been able to sell their response/review to last seasons fiasco you could argue that stripping the 2021 title would right the wrong and provide an out to the FIA.I just see it as doing more harm than good, would Hamilton even want the title under those conditions?
A breach is a breach - you could argue in mitigation of the sanction imposed but I think it's disingenuous that RB had their own interpretation that differed from everyone else within the budget cap.They mentioned a procedure breach as well. No idea about specifics (if they ever mentioned anything) but given AMR got the same it sounds like they did their budget calculations wrong: like left out stuff (extra catering costs if we give them the benefit of the doubt) that should've been included.
Cannot imagine a team deliberately breaching the budget cap when they know it will be audited.
But it was afaik, a minor overspend punishment is as follows, so hit them in the constructors with a big point deduction and no aero testing is within the punishments allowed.
The potential consequences for a 'minor' breach are a financial penalty and/or minor sporting penalty, and are as follows:
- A fine in an amount to be determined on a case by case basis
- A public reprimand
- A deduction of Constructors' Championship points awarded
- A deduction of Drivers' Championship points awarded
- Suspension from one or more stages of a competition
- Limitations on ability to conduct aerodynamic or other testing; and/or reduction of the cost cap
Reports indicate they overspent by between 1% and 1.5%. Deducting those points, even double, won't be a big enough disincentive to prevent future breaches by any of the other teams.Reducing all driver and constructor points by double the excess percentage and the same for future budget caps for the next two years would be enough of a deterrent. Major breach should be the above plus disqualification.
Have you considered seeing a counselor?RBR is a team, and Max having a superior car gave him the tools he needed to win. This he should be equally penalised.
I like the idea of them having double the amount they were over being deducted from next years cap. That will send a strong message. And of course for Max to hand over last years trophy to its rightful owner, Hamilton.
Fair enough. Could even make it the points deducted from both championships be double the combined sum of the difference to every team's cap total that didn't exceed the cap.Reports indicate they overspent by between 1% and 1.5%. Deducting those points, even double, won't be a big enough disincentive to prevent future breaches by any of the other teams.
If the over spend was Adrian Newey then the FIA have shown that the overspend was performance-related.......
I am also hearing similar talk that Helmut Marko's multi Million Salary were also not declared.
FIA need to put the facts into the open, non of this is helping F1.
It's just as messy and allows gaming of the system. The driver benefits from the car. The car and driver are not severable.Fiddling with driver's points at this stage would be too messy.
You're right, but at this point the punishment should be forward-looking. Nobody benefits from stripping Max of his title. There's already been so much drama around it and we're almost a year on. Regardless of what happens, that title will always be tainted. Best to leave it be and manage and enforce rules to improve the sport.It's just as messy and allows gaming of the system. The driver benefits from the car. The car and driver are not severable.
Why would F1 be different to any other sport if it's found out retrospectively that rules were broken?You're right, but at this point the punishment should be forward-looking. Nobody benefits from stripping Max of his title. There's already been so much drama around it and we're almost a year on. Regardless of what happens, that title will always be tainted. Best to leave it be and manage and enforce rules to improve the sport.
It's just as messy and allows gaming of the system. The driver benefits from the car. The car and driver are not severable.
You miss the point. Nobody is arguing rules weren't broken.Why would F1 be different to any other sport if it's found out retrospectively that rules were broken?
The precedent has to match the circumstances too. I'm not sure if Spygate involving the isolated criminal actions of team members is comparable.Sure, but there is precedent for this: Spygate, where McLaren was DSQ'd from the 2007 championship, but not its drivers.
Are you seriously arguing that a driver is greater than the sport? I don't see the comparison in terms of the controversy - if rules are broken there should be consequences where an advantage was arguably gained. This is not a scenario where the rules were not enforced as intended/written or reinterpreted incorrectly.You miss the point. Nobody is arguing rules weren't broken.
We're looking at potential solutions.
Say they strip Max of the title and it goes to Lewis. A title that is already controversial now becomes more so. Instead of it being the title that "Max didn't win"," Max was gifted" etc, it becomes the title that "Lewis only won because of the FIA", "Lewis won a year too late" etc etc etc.
It's really bad optics for the sport. And it is a business, marketing is huge for Formula 1. What if Max leaves over this nonsense? We lose one of the best drivers to ever do it, the championship is that much less interesting.
Whether you're a Max or Lewis fan (the two most vocal camps), I doubt either side would be happy with an outcome like that.