• Massa still salty over losing in 2008

    From Woozy Song@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 12 07:38:56 2024
    Interesting part is that Bernie knew Piquet Jr. crash was deliberate,
    but didn't investigate until end of season.

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  • From News@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 12 12:47:38 2024
    On 3/12/2024 12:43 PM, a425couple wrote:
    On 3/11/24 16:38, Woozy Song wrote:
    Interesting part is that Bernie knew Piquet Jr. crash was deliberate,
    but didn't investigate until end of season.

    Yes, "Interesting".

    And that is what gives this old controversy legitimate
    legs.  The officials knew improprieties took place
    in the points awarded, and yet they kept quiet about it,
    and hoped 'the wrongness' would just stay a secret.

    It did not.



    "Mislead to Survive" -- long before Liberty and Netflix

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From a425couple@21:1/5 to Woozy Song on Tue Mar 12 09:43:01 2024
    On 3/11/24 16:38, Woozy Song wrote:
    Interesting part is that Bernie knew Piquet Jr. crash was deliberate,
    but didn't investigate until end of season.

    Yes, "Interesting".

    And that is what gives this old controversy legitimate
    legs. The officials knew improprieties took place
    in the points awarded, and yet they kept quiet about it,
    and hoped 'the wrongness' would just stay a secret.

    It did not.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sir Tim@21:1/5 to Mark on Wed Mar 13 17:04:00 2024
    Mark <[email protected]> wrote:
    a425couple <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 3/11/24 16:38, Woozy Song wrote:
    Interesting part is that Bernie knew Piquet Jr. crash was deliberate,
    but didn't investigate until end of season.

    Yes, "Interesting".

    And that is what gives this old controversy legitimate
    legs. The officials knew improprieties took place
    in the points awarded, and yet they kept quiet about it,
    and hoped 'the wrongness' would just stay a secret.

    It did not.

    Several things make no sense to me. The first is why you would spend so
    much money relying on the testimony of an old man who is less than
    reliable. The second is his apparent certainty that the FIA would have
    to cancel the entire race result if they found wrongdoing...even though precedent suggests (Schumacher, McLaren, etc.) the team and/or driver
    would lose points not the entire race being cancelled. The third thing
    is that anyone would see it as "fair" to change the results after the
    fact. While drivers do their best to maximise points, you take different decisions and more risks if you are more points away, so a different
    result in one race could well have (for better or worse) change the subsequent races. You simply can't unpick these things "fairly".
    Choosing the one change that happens to hand you a title...many years
    after the fact...is being very selective.

    This is going to be messy all-round. Ecclestone is going to prove a very unreliable witness (he has already), and most of the others known to be involved are either dead (Mosley) or have reasons not to get involved (Nelsinho, Briatore, Alonso). Unless they have a smoking gun bit of
    evidence, just proving the case will be hard. Getting precisely the
    outcome they desire will be harder. This will be ruinously expensive,
    make Massa look like a *very* sore loser and open a can of worms that
    cannot end well.

    (Don't get me wrong, I feel sorry for Massa and how this has played out.
    He's not the first driver to lose out on a title because of luck, and he won't be the last. Attempting to litigate your way around this is going
    to tarnish rather than burnish his reputation IMO).

    I agree with everything you say and see nothing good for Massa in the whole affair..

    Hamilton had a much better case for challenging the result of the 2021 WDC
    but he decided to suck it up and not litigate.

    --
    Sir Tim

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  • From geoff@21:1/5 to Sir Tim on Thu Mar 14 09:41:08 2024
    On 14/03/2024 6:04 am, Sir Tim wrote:
    Mark <[email protected]> wrote:
    a425couple <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 3/11/24 16:38, Woozy Song wrote:
    Interesting part is that Bernie knew Piquet Jr. crash was deliberate,
    but didn't investigate until end of season.

    Yes, "Interesting".

    And that is what gives this old controversy legitimate
    legs. The officials knew improprieties took place
    in the points awarded, and yet they kept quiet about it,
    and hoped 'the wrongness' would just stay a secret.

    It did not.

    Several things make no sense to me. The first is why you would spend so
    much money relying on the testimony of an old man who is less than
    reliable. The second is his apparent certainty that the FIA would have
    to cancel the entire race result if they found wrongdoing...even though
    precedent suggests (Schumacher, McLaren, etc.) the team and/or driver
    would lose points not the entire race being cancelled. The third thing
    is that anyone would see it as "fair" to change the results after the
    fact. While drivers do their best to maximise points, you take different
    decisions and more risks if you are more points away, so a different
    result in one race could well have (for better or worse) change the
    subsequent races. You simply can't unpick these things "fairly".
    Choosing the one change that happens to hand you a title...many years
    after the fact...is being very selective.

    This is going to be messy all-round. Ecclestone is going to prove a very
    unreliable witness (he has already), and most of the others known to be
    involved are either dead (Mosley) or have reasons not to get involved
    (Nelsinho, Briatore, Alonso). Unless they have a smoking gun bit of
    evidence, just proving the case will be hard. Getting precisely the
    outcome they desire will be harder. This will be ruinously expensive,
    make Massa look like a *very* sore loser and open a can of worms that
    cannot end well.

    (Don't get me wrong, I feel sorry for Massa and how this has played out.
    He's not the first driver to lose out on a title because of luck, and he
    won't be the last. Attempting to litigate your way around this is going
    to tarnish rather than burnish his reputation IMO).

    I agree with everything you say and see nothing good for Massa in the whole affair..

    Hamilton had a much better case for challenging the result of the 2021 WDC but he decided to suck it up and not litigate.


    The difference being maybe that MAS is running short of $$$ and MAH isn't ?

    geoff

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  • From geoff@21:1/5 to geoff on Thu Mar 14 10:42:57 2024
    On 14/03/2024 9:41 am, geoff wrote:
    On 14/03/2024 6:04 am, Sir Tim wrote:
    Mark <[email protected]> wrote:
    a425couple <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 3/11/24 16:38, Woozy Song wrote:
    Interesting part is that Bernie knew Piquet Jr. crash was deliberate, >>>>> but didn't investigate until end of season.

    Yes, "Interesting".

    And that is what gives this old controversy legitimate
    legs.  The officials knew improprieties took place
    in the points awarded, and yet they kept quiet about it,
    and hoped 'the wrongness' would just stay a secret.

    It did not.

    Several things make no sense to me. The first is why you would spend so
    much money relying on the testimony of an old man who is less than
    reliable.  The second is his apparent certainty that the FIA would have >>> to cancel the entire race result if they found wrongdoing...even though
    precedent suggests (Schumacher, McLaren, etc.) the team and/or driver
    would lose points not the entire race being cancelled. The third thing
    is that anyone would see it as "fair" to change the results after the
    fact. While drivers do their best to maximise points, you take different >>> decisions and more risks if you are more points away, so a different
    result in one race could well have (for better or worse) change the
    subsequent races. You simply can't unpick these things "fairly".
    Choosing the one change that happens to hand you a title...many years
    after the fact...is being very selective.

    This is going to be messy all-round. Ecclestone is going to prove a very >>> unreliable witness (he has already), and most of the others known to be
    involved are either dead (Mosley) or have reasons not to get involved
    (Nelsinho, Briatore, Alonso). Unless they have a smoking gun bit of
    evidence, just proving the case will be hard. Getting precisely the
    outcome they desire will be harder. This will be ruinously expensive,
    make Massa look like a *very* sore loser and open a can of worms that
    cannot end well.

    (Don't get me wrong, I feel sorry for Massa and how this has played out. >>> He's not the first driver to lose out on a title because of luck, and he >>> won't be the last. Attempting to litigate your way around this is going
    to tarnish rather than burnish his reputation IMO).

    I agree with everything you say and see nothing good for Massa in the
    whole
    affair..

    Hamilton had a much better case for challenging the result of the 2021
    WDC
    but he decided to suck it up and not litigate.


    The difference being maybe that MAS is running short of $$$ and MAH isn't ?

    geoff

    Lysdexic.... 'HAM'.

    geoff

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  • From News@21:1/5 to Mark on Thu Mar 14 08:57:41 2024
    On 3/14/2024 5:43 AM, Mark wrote:
    geoff <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 14/03/2024 9:41 am, geoff wrote:

    The difference being maybe that MAS is running short of $$$ and MAH isn't ? >>
    Lysdexic.... 'HAM'.

    Yes...but that raises a different question. I think it's generally
    understood that this kind of litigation needs deep pockets and is far
    from a sure bet...and that's even with compelling evidence, which the ramblings of an unreliable witness is not, IMO. If Massa is short of
    cash, this kind of thing will require lots of money which will be tied
    up for years, during which time he will find he's not welcome in a
    number of F1-related activities, further reducing his ability to earn.

    If that's the case - and I think it is - *someone* is bankrolling this.
    So, I'd be interested in knowing who is supporting him and (more
    importantly) their motivation for doing so.

    It wouldn't even surprise me if it had nothing to do with Hamilton (*or* Massa), but rather some sort of axe being ground elsewhere in the FIA or
    F1. It's destabilising and another unwelcome distraction.

    All very odd.


    Or is it designed to pot-stir, thus attract more attention?

    "Stay tuned ... for the next exciting episode of F1 in Chains"

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  • From News@21:1/5 to Mark on Thu Mar 14 14:33:30 2024
    On 3/14/2024 12:36 PM, Mark wrote:
    News <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 3/14/2024 5:43 AM, Mark wrote:

    All very odd.


    Or is it designed to pot-stir, thus attract more attention?

    "Stay tuned ... for the next exciting episode of F1 in Chains"

    Yes...but again, cui bono? It's a damned expensive way to get publicity...which goes back to the questions of "who" and "why"?


    He/she/they who benefit from clicks and eyeballs.

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