Monaco doesn't have to pay sh!t while they have enough money but a crapshoot track. Malaysia has to pay, while they don't have the money but a great track. Shows what the focus of this "sport" is.
Yeah well the slowbastian fanboy cult was crying everytime Webber didn't completely give way to slowbastian, but obviously the biggest clown in f1 (slowbastian) can do whatever he wants 😂😂😂😂 well logic was never something the slowbastian fanboys used 🤣🤣🤣🤣
If anyone asks why I hate team orders, just listen to the commentators. They were having a blast watching this, as were a massive majority of fans. This was one of the best battles of the 2010s, and to think team orders could’ve ruined it.
Team orders are fantastic- you don’t race your team mate, and potentially score. Zero points with a collision. It’s a great thing you are not a team principle. Youd be woeful
Every time race circumstances brought Rosberg and Hamilton near each other, you'd be on edge. I know teams have to look out for the constructor's, but rebellious drivers make it all the more interesting.
and an absolutely true one. Also, it's not like this was the last race in the calender, it was at the start of the season and he wanted all the points he could get just like every driver
Vettel got pissed after this and went on to win 12 more races and shattered Mark.... He showed why he overtook him in this race.... I mean mark really messed him up in 2012 brasil by squeezing him hard in lap one mind you he was in a title fight with Fernando
@@allthekingshorses7178 "Webber himself was squeezed out wide by another driver in Brazil" -If your teammate is in contention for the WC, you have to show awareness, Mark didn't! "if your team tells you to do something it, you do it" -Exactly what Webber REFUSED to do at Silverstone in 2011!
The hypocrisy behind this never fails to amuse me. Webber disobeyed team orders in Silverstone 2011 and Vettel let Webber past in Brazil 2011, because he had a gearbox issue and he wanted the best possible result for the team. Webber also almost cost Vettel the championship by squeezing him at Brazil in 2012. No one batted any eye at all this. F1 fans always complain about team orders, yet bashed Vettel for not following them.
@@tdawg999 You are talking nonsense, Webber tyres were options and they were faster, both had the same engine mode, Seb had the pole position he led the 1st lap but they played strategy against him. This was SV's race to lose and he won it. Losers like Webber always make excuses.
The argument portrayed by RB was that this race does a lot of work on the engine and so they felt they needed to preserve the 1-2. It was more of a RB being unable to manage Vettel. Mercedes also incorporated team orders and were more successful because they had more control of their drivers
This is when seb was just an Animal on track. He had that senna mentality were nothing short of winning was good enough. I was always a seb fan but this was when he was proper hated but it seemed to fuel him. His record of 15 poles in one season (2011) is a record that will be very very hard to beat.
Controversial this may be but I miss this version of Sebastian. I miss his ruthlessness, his devastating speed and everything else that made him a 4 time champion at the start of the decade. So what if people didn’t like him back then? Your not in sport to be liked by everyone. In my eyes he’s gone too soft these last few years
@@TheRafaelBond If you look at the stats he was the driver with the most overtakes in this entire season You need to switch sports if you are doubting the talent of a 4× world champion who beat alonso twice in the process too
Of course this era was great, he is mostly likeable now because of the things he does off-track. He is still the same driver but just doesn't have a fast car, the overtake award confirms that. If Aston is as good as they predict for next year then we will see this again
Mark shouldve reflected on his own action in silverstone 2011 & brazil 2012. And the salty comment about "protection", well Seb has been beating you from the start of his career, outperforming you since he was driving Toro Rosso car
Christian Horner said that this was 100% payback for 2012 Brazilian GP which was only 2 races ago. I can absolutely understand Seb’s frustration and have no problem with him disobeying team orders. You don’t squeeze your teammate to the wall at the start of his fucking championship race.
I think this was the only podium of all 3 guys, where not anybody is laughing or in cheering mood. Hamilton as well as he only stays in front of Rosberg because of team order.
Coz Seb Was Right. The team would have favoured the Faster Vettel instead of Slow Webber . Same as Mercedes Benz do with Lewis the Second Half of This Year 🤷
It's not a discriminative thing, it's just circumstances.. it was the second race of the season, should've let em race even though Webber has never outperformed Vettel..
Mark Webber compromised Sebastian's race in Brazil in 2012 by moving into him and probably cost him the World Championship. Horner clarified and stood by Seb's decision to taught a lesson to Mark.
mark was told seb wouldnt try for an overtake so slowed down, if he was told vettel was still going to challenge then he wouldnt have stopped and wouldnt have turned his engine down
There was a team agreement that they would not race eachother at the end, because it creates a risk of a collision/tire wear and a major loss of points. Mark followed the agreement and turned his engine down, or at least that's what he claims. Seb then overtook him. Assuming Mark is telling the truth that he disengaged to follow team orders, the sneak attack by Seb is clearly unfair.
@@randywatson341 Mark pitted on lap 43 and ahead into turn 1 by 0.2sec. Lap 44 seb set fastest lap of the entire race. But Mark is still ahead which means he matched sebs time on a slower tire. By what logic did he turn down the engine? If so, Vette l would have breezed past him on the back straight into last corner. No seb passes him on lap 45 turn 7. Mark is still gets DRS gap on lap 46 basically matching him. Vettel then just pulled away by being fast. Slow mark gave up and turned his engine down and cried infront of media. Doesn't matter what the team orders are. You don't give away your first win of the season to potential championship rival
After hearing Croft & Brundle’s commentary in this one, I swear they did not even know that “Multi 21” was put in place. 🤦🏻♂️ This is why I preferred Ben Edwards & David Coulthard because they knew what was going on & reacted the way I figured they would’ve.
All those speeches about high ground make me think the Red Bulls incarnated the Rule of the Two and all of a sudden Seb unleashed the Darth Vettel in him and chose that moment to overcome his "master".
I wish they still had the blue room, I disagree with the way liberty media has gone about the new podium configurations. miss seeing the drivers reactions "behind the scenes" before the podium.
Hamilton disobeyed team orders a year later in Hungary 2014 and he got praised for that while Vettel was villianised at the time. Not to mention Red Bull were on for a 1-2 either way here, but Mercedes would have most likely gotten 2nd in Hungary if Hamilton let Rosberg past.
People back then hated Vettel for this, which is odd enough considering the fact that it was team orders in the second race of the year. Others in the comments also mentioned the things Mark did just the year prior. But most always forget one thing. For the drivers its all about the points. And prom Vettels pov what would you rather have: Getting first place and having a 9 point advantage over the Kimi who won in the first race or only having two points more than Kimi while your teammate has the exact same amount of points?
The way I see it, Redbull made Vettel loose the magic: they tried to keep him under the leash. If he was like the younger self in ferrari, he might had a chance to win
Seb, Lewis and Mark in the cool down room looks very serious hostile, but on the podium celebration and interview, they regain themselves. Good old days
Just looking back on this to see how much the cool down rooms have changed in the last 10 years. Massive screens everywhere these days rather than a piddly little LG TV.
10:16 who is the lady, with the short blond gray hair and the red shirt as well as black earrings, standing in front of Sir Jackie Stewart?! She looks familiar, but i do not remember from where.