coyote wrote:
I'm finding it hard to see why it is so different here.
Because it's not under brakes?
coyote wrote:
I'm finding it hard to see why it is so different here.
coyote wrote:Of course not (don't know if tom is actually so ignorant to all my previous comments to form this conclucion or just in it for the wind-up), his first move inside was the right thing to do. The thing I'm not fine is him continuing to attempt the move to a gap that was always going to close with Marquez always in front of him, when he saw Marquez the whole time (and Marquez didn't).
Think of it this way: the equivalence of this into a slow corner (so the move happens during braking) is the rider behind going for a gap inside and the two bikes colliding at the entry with him having 2/3 of the bike alongside. In this occasion the overtakee almost always loses out and is forced wide losing the place. The reaction to this move is always that the orvertaker didn't get it done fairly, he came in too hot and too late and that it is generally an unfair, dirty if unintentional move.
I'm finding it hard to see why it is so different here.
Gustav O wrote:Well all riders that was asked about it after the race, Lorenzo, Dovi and Pedrosa for example say that it was no fault on Marquez in that incident. Casey made avery strong statement about the penalty and CE II retweeted that same statement.
Gustav O wrote:I also think that it was a clear race incident happening because of what both riders did and those things happen, I just don´t have the energy to argue when we all should agree to disagree. No malice or intent on any part more than racing for the best part of the race track at the same unfortunate moment.
Rusty Bucket USA wrote:I reject this. I am generally accepting of Stoner's interpretation of things, but in this case, if he had been in Espargaro's situation (like at, oh I don't know... Jerez last year), he would complaining up a storm about the repeatedly dangerous behavior shown by Marquez.
Rusty Bucket USA wrote:I concede that it is a "racing incident", but the problem is Marquez' behavior pattern of swerving to block. I'm not saying he intended to crash Espargaro, but he has arrived at the point where he doesn't fear the consequences of continuing to do it. Much like Simoncelli at Le Mans last year, he needs a serious warning.
Gar wrote:From what I am reading in this post, if we could just send these photos to the riders in question prior to the incident they could easily have avoided the whole thing!
Hanuman wrote:coyote wrote:
I'm finding it hard to see why it is so different here.
Because it's not under brakes?
Rusty Bucket USA wrote:I reject this. I am generally accepting of Stoner's interpretation of things, but in this case, if he had been in Espargaro's situation (like at, oh I don't know... Jerez last year), he would complaining up a storm about the repeatedly dangerous behavior shown by Marquez.
tom wrote:
I'm not winding you up, and I have a much better understanding of where you are coming from now. Correct me if I'm wrong but you agree Pol had every right to be on the inside, its just that he cant stay there if Marquez decides he wants that space? They were essentially side by side however Marquez was slightly in front so you seem to be applying the rule that the rider in front has right of way and the other rider should extract themselves quick-smart. No?
There has been situations where riders take successive corners essentially side by side, swapping the lead several times by a nose. What you are saying is that the rider in front (even if is just by a marginal amount) has the right to take the track and the rider behind must yield and give his track position away?
Diving down the inside into a corner is a legitimate way to overtake. The decision on whether it is fair or not is made on the basis of whether the overtaking rider has simply come into the corner two hot and was never going to make the corner anyway. Obviously Pol can not be accused of that here.
coyote wrote:Hanuman wrote:coyote wrote:
I'm finding it hard to see why it is so different here.
Because it's not under brakes?
And why does that make a difference determining who's at fault in your opinion?
Gustav O wrote:Rusty Bucket USA wrote:I reject this. I am generally accepting of Stoner's interpretation of things, but in this case, if he had been in Espargaro's situation (like at, oh I don't know... Jerez last year), he would complaining up a storm about the repeatedly dangerous behavior shown by Marquez.
That might be the case but that is just speculation. The riders that have commented has said that Marquez was not at fault, while they point out that he was at Qatar. I think that says a lot about the situation.Rusty Bucket USA wrote:I concede that it is a "racing incident", but the problem is Marquez' behavior pattern of swerving to block. I'm not saying he intended to crash Espargaro, but he has arrived at the point where he doesn't fear the consequences of continuing to do it. Much like Simoncelli at Le Mans last year, he needs a serious warning.
I agree that Marquez is a rider who is close to and over the edge a little too often but the problem is that penalizing a rider for a race incident based on other moves that you don´t penalize him for is just wrong. Penalties has to be given when appropriate to have the right effect.
coyote wrote:tom wrote:
...Correct me if I'm wrong but you agree Pol had every right to be on the inside, its just that he cant stay there if Marquez decides he wants that space? They were essentially side by side however Marquez was slightly in front so you seem to be applying the rule that the rider in front has right of way and the other rider should extract themselves quick-smart. No?
Yes, and yes. Marquez is on the racing line slightly ahead so he has the right to the corner (important factor: only Espargaro had the full undrestanding of the situation).
coyote wrote:you haven't brought anything else to the discussion but your confrontative attitude so that's for the better.
coyote wrote:Yes, and yes. Marquez is on the racing line slightly ahead so he has the right to the corner (important factor: only Espargaro had the full undrestanding of the situation).
There has been situations where riders take successive corners essentially side by side, swapping the lead several times by a nose. What you are saying is that the rider in front (even if is just by a marginal amount) has the right to take the track and the rider behind must yield and give his track position away?
Those are exceptional circumstances and it doesn't apply here, bc obviously both riders need to be aware of each other to take those corners side by side. So of course I'm not saying what you're suggesting.


Cam D wrote:That's a lot of work! Well done. Interesting viewing and seems to me to make Marc look a little over aggressive. A bit like he was playing chicken and expected Pol to shut down.
Thanks


coyote wrote:So you have no idea from when on Marquez saw Espargaro but still Marquez had sufficient time to avoid him? How does that make any sense? In my scenario (the one I believe in) he had milliseconds to make those adjustments, in other words not even close to enough.
A question: If riders are racing each other, they never have an obligation to slow down in any situation?
Gustav O wrote:That might be the case but that is just speculation. The riders that have commented has said that Marquez was not at fault, while they point out that he was at Qatar. I think that says a lot about the situation..
ieism wrote:Race Evil Penalties $hall be Overthrown Later![]()
Hanuman wrote:
If, as you say, the solution to the Pol/Marc incident is for Pol to have backed off...how do you back off on a banzai braking effort up the inside...Squeeze harder?![]()
But that's beside the point, the analogy isn't bad. I mark this one down as a racing incident. But I am not impressed by Marc's carelessness/seeming lack of awareness. Sepang '11 still sits in my mind.
tom wrote:coyote wrote:tom wrote:
...Correct me if I'm wrong but you agree Pol had every right to be on the inside, its just that he cant stay there if Marquez decides he wants that space? They were essentially side by side however Marquez was slightly in front so you seem to be applying the rule that the rider in front has right of way and the other rider should extract themselves quick-smart. No?
Yes, and yes. Marquez is on the racing line slightly ahead so he has the right to the corner (important factor: only Espargaro had the full undrestanding of the situation).
But there is no rule like that. They may have something like that in car racing with the B pilar rule of thumb but there is nothing like that in bike racing and you would destroy the racing if you tried to implement it. If a rider leaves he door open the guy behind is perfectly entitled to take the opportunity, that's just racing. You would eliminate 9 tents of the passing if that rule was applied.
Pol hugged the inside of the track getting alongside Marc safely leaving heaps of room. He was alongside an irrespective of whether he was 200mm in front or 200mm behind, it was not a case of running up the back of another rider, he was completely faultless in this incident.
Riders battling for position must leave room for the other guy.
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