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Sebastian Vettel: Right Or Wrong?

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ChillDoubt | 16:17 Sun 24th Mar 2013 | Sport
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For anyone who didn't see it, Vettel ignored team orders whilst Webber was in the lead and passed him with 10 laps to go.

Whilst I understand there are team orders and responsibilities to sponsors, team mates etc was it really that wrong? Isn't this what we want to see, the best drivers in the world battling it out wheel to wheel?
Vettel is a triple world champion, how do you ask a proven winner not to compete? Yes, there is history between the two and yes they drive for the same team, but that was some ballsy move by Vettel to take the lead, let alone ignore the team order.

I've never seen an F1 winner look so dejected at the end of the race when really, he ought to be applauded for giving F1 fans the real thrill of racing.

Thoughts?
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Heat of the moment, perhaps deliberate. Vettel has said mea culpa, held his hands up, apologised and said he would do so to Webber.

End of matter. Or at least for Red Bull.

You can't legislate against this as the number two will always go out as two unless there is a failure. "Oi Guv, Mr Rules Man, I wasn't getting the very best out of my turbo......." or whatever excuse.
Is anybody really interested in this totally boring "sport"


A rough guess would be ........the OP and the posters below the OP
Don't bother watching anymore as team orders have ruined what it should be. A race!
My thoughts are that if two horses of the same owner or trainer were in the same race and one jockey slackened off to let the other win, that jockey would be banned from racing, as would the trainer. Don't you watch motor races to see the best driver win ? If not, why do you watch F1 ?
FP 43..can you be certain that it never happens in horse racing...I thought not!
No sparky, we're more subtle than that !
What would Senna do
Well done Sebastian at last a driver who wants to win a race
Team says don't pass then he shouldn't have passed. IMHO he threw his toys out of the pram knowing that he won't get any repercussions - well, not until he tries to do that to Webber again!!
Replace Webber with senna and they would have both been in the gravel, Vettel passed but he needed Webber to avoid a collision, one of them save them both, I imagine Horner would be well aware of that. It's difficult to ask a racing driver not to race but discipline in the team is necessary for the common good. Now Webber will have justification next time he ignores team orders.
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This sums it up:

Gerhard Berger, who drove for McLaren between 1990 and 1992, said Vettel was showing the ruthless streak that characterises the sport's greatest drivers.
"To win a World Championship three or four times you have to be very selfish," he told BBC Radio 5 live.
"These boys have such a big killer instinct - they cannot follow their brain and they just do what their instinct tells them.
"This is part of his success and nobody, no team mate, no team chief, will change it."

Exactly. The world's best drivers duking it out, wheel to wheel with one inches from a pit wall at 190 mph, now THAT's racing!
''wheel to wheel with one inches from a pit wall at 190 mph, now THAT's racing! ''

Anyone remember the Schumacher/Barrichello 'inches from a pit wall' incident in Hungary 2010? Vettel has never fitted his 'Baby Shuey' nickname better ;-p

DangerUxd

If Senna was there, Vettel would not have been able to get past. Senna was a master at having a 'wide' car.
Its hard to be ruthless in today's formula one, the race is controlled by the teams and the strategists, the drivers do as they are told. Ironically the 'brave' move that Vettel pulled yesterday was followed by hours of apologising and whining.
As a racing fan I would prefer to see a race that isnt about team orders or an agreement, however those days are gone, its a multi billion pound industry that is heavily controlled by everyone except the drivers.
''As a racing fan I would prefer to see a race that isnt about team orders''

So would I, but Team Orders were given to Vettel and he chose to ignore them. The argument: who is bigger, the team or the driver, will rattle on for ages (and by the way, there's no 'Team in Vettel') ;-p

I think this incident does more harm to Christian Horner's authority within Red Bull team than either driver.

its widely known that vettel is the team favourite, as such they have more freedom, just as schumacher did in the 90's over barrichello and just as alonso has over massa.

number two driver though can be cast to the wind quite easily.
in fact webber himself said on the podium that vettel would be protected by the team "yet again"
Seb ignored team orders so he gets a deserved slap on the wrist in front of the cameras.The call from above was to turn things down and hold station to reduce tyre wear. Seb was, however in the best position to decide whether his tyres were ok and so made the right choice.Mercedes also gave out the same message to Nico and Lewis regarding fuel conservation.They could'nt argue with this call because the engineers know from the telemetry the exact fuel loadings. They held station for 5 laps ...yawn. Vettel stuck his neck out and Webber fought to keep position...so he also forgot about multi 21 team orders.I recon Vettel got a pat on the back behind the cameras from Helmut Merkle and Christin Horner.The publicity for the team can be seen in every newspaper and every news channel.Mercedes did'nt get much,so draw your own conclusions.
It's not just about Team Orders -it's also about Tyres. What it ain't about is Racing.
Team orders is always going to be a part of the sport - whether it's illegal or not ( currently it's not )

Look at it as a race between teams first and foremost ( interspersed with that you will on occasion get a race between team mates , if there are no number 1 and number two drivers ) .

Of course the solution would be to have just one driver in each team - but i think that's a non starter as obviously 1/2 the grid would dissapear .

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