Did anybody see Hungarian GP qualifying today? It appears lewis hamilton was not allowed a last lap by Alonzo fernando's pit crew holding him up. Lewis had the fastest laptimes of the day. Fernando got the pole.
The SPEED broadcast timed it and showed that Alonso waited for more than 10 seconds after the lollipop went up. It was obvious that Alonso was acting on his own. RD was livid. Like Hamilton said after the qualifying, "you all saw what happened." We did indeed.
Alonso fully deserved what he got and is in fact lucky not to have gotten worse. Hamilton admitted to defying team orders to be the first car out in Q3 so he could dictate the pace and burn up the most fuel. He never held anyone up. Alonso deliberately held up Hamilton knowing full well what he was doing, not allowing Hamilton another shot at pole, because he KNEW that he was faster.
The difference is obvious, and Varsha's comment about the stewards should not get involved in team affairs is misplaced. This was a driver blocking another driver, not team orders. The stewards are well within their authority to punish Alonso. Did you see the reactions fo thepit crew when Alonso took pole, and Ron Dennis' reaction as well? That says it all.
What I don't get is why McClaren then went out of their way to try to smokescreen everything. How pathetic! If I were Ron Dennis, I would have publicly stated that this kind of behavior in my team is not accepable by any driver, and I would have fined Alonso publicly. At the same token, I would have also fined Hamilton publicly for defying team orders regarding the running order for the star of Q3.
Fair enough, Hamilton shouldn't have sped out to be first for Q3, but it isn't like Alonso was right behind him, Kimi was second in the queue. Alonso now is a hypocrite and a spiteful cheat in his own right, after having been the biggest criticizer of MS's antics last year.
End Rant.
At least Justice was served with Hamilton winning the race and Alonso missing out on the podium. That was most satisfying.
...What I don't get is why McClaren then went out of their way to try to smokescreen everything. How pathetic! If I were Ron Dennis, I would have publicly stated that this kind of behavior in my team is not accepable by any driver, and I would have fined Alonso publicly...
...At the same token, I would have also fined Hamilton publicly for defying team orders regarding the running order for the star of Q3...
They couldn't do that because doing so would acknowledge the existence of team orders which are technically forbidden.
I know we talked about this in person, but upon further thought I don't think this is the case, because team orders about the order of the line up in qualifying really wouldn't constitute preference over another car or driver in the team. It's not like they were asking Hamilton to slow down for Alonso on the last turn of the final lap of the race or anything. Although on a strictly technical level of discussion and interpretation of the sporting regs, you might be right...they might not have wanted to risk that.
Guys, do you all know that Hamilton delibrately disobay a team order, and play it off during the interview like he is the victim?
Like the TV commentators said it best, McLeran shouldn't have been punished as a team, it was the two drivers who should have. Not just one.
I think Ron Dennis was so pissed off at both drivers that he didn't have a way to deal with it. I think there are more than we know and what ever Lewis did had some major effect on the team strategy, which perhaps had some thing to do with what the team had in mind for Alons, and Lewis' action cause the strategy to take a U turn. Alonson's action may not have been proper, but between the team members, if they don't get along, they will do what ever they can to win the championship without team's help. Senna and Prost did just that. 20 years from now, no one will talk about this matter, but who won the championship. Unless the driver keep on working the same dirt like MS in the past. Today, no one is questioning Senna's ability, but they do with MS. Until the incident over the qualifying, Alonso has been one of the most honest champion in F1. Lewis Hamilton however, is already playing mind game during his rookie season.What does McLaren care about drivers points? They should have absolutely thrown Alonso under the bus. Instead by trying to cover it up the stewards effectively said "Ok, you want to try to tell us it was a team decision and not Alonso alone? First of all, we believe it was Alonso alone, so we're going to knock him back 5 spots. And since you are trying to tell us Alonso isn't to blame, have it your way. Team decision equals team penalty. No contructor points."
I think Ron Dennis was so pissed off at both drivers that he didn't have a way to deal with it. I think there are more than we know and what ever Lewis did had some major effect on the team strategy, which perhaps had some thing to do with what the team had in mind for Alons, and Lewis' action cause the strategy to take a U turn. Alonson's action may not have been proper, but between the team members, if they don't get along, they will do what ever they can to win the championship without team's help. Senna and Prost did just that. 20 years from now, no one will talk about this matter, but who won the championship. Unless the driver keep on working the same dirt like MS in the past. Today, no one is questioning Senna's ability, but they do with MS. Until the incident over the qualifying, Alonso has been one of the most honest champion in F1. Lewis Hamilton however, is already playing mind game during his rookie season.
So at the end of the season, most likely FA will depart the team and McLaren will have more problem from Ferrari with the espionage issues. There is an old chinese saying - A mountain can not hold two tigers. One will have to go.
One thing I will say is: this season has been pertty cool, it is what F1 needs.
Dead horse and all, but I swear I saw another guy counting alonso off after the lollipop went up.
This was a top-down shot that has since been removed from YouTube, but the guy was further down the pit row and was wearing McLaren team outfit... he pointed his finger at the exact moment Alonso left.
Since nobody else is saying anything about this, I wonder if Alonso is getting some support within the team (the guy Ron Dennis grabbed around the shoulder right after Q3?) and they helped him time his pit exit to either give him a good, clean lap or purposely torpedoing Hamilton's chances of getting a last lap in?
I know the "new" story is Alonso was on the radio complaining about them putting scrubbed hard tires on and such, but it's weird that there was another guy counting him off.
I know the "new" story is Alonso was on the radio complaining about them putting scrubbed hard tires on and such, but it's weird that there was another guy counting him off.
Huh, that is weird.
Doesn't make any sense though. If the team held Alonso up Alonso would have been the first to say so. The "wrong tires" story never changed. That was Alonso's first story and he stuck to it. He also could have challenged the stewards' penalty and used that footage to prove it. That 5 grid penalty devastated his chances for the title.
I don't believe it. I think Alonso held him up on his own. The more I read about the team's inner workings the more I know there's a lot going on we don't know. One thing suggests the team are supporting Hamilton, then Alonso, then neither...who knows.
One thing I do believe is that Hamilton is driving better than anyone expected and I think Alonso, trailing in the championship points, was hoping for a little more support from everyone. Instead, all eyes and efforts are with Hamilton and Alonso just isn't getting the support he needs.