Tag Archives: Max Verstappen

Why Aston Martin has to “keep cool” and not write-off Austin upgrades

Aston had a difficult weekend in Austin

Aston Martin Formula 1 boss Mike Krack says it’s too early to write-off the upgrade package trialled in Austin, despite the team having one of its toughest weekends of the year.

Krack says that Aston has to “keep cool” while analysing what could have been done better and coming up with a competitive spec for the Mexico City GP.

Although Fernando Alonso showed decent pace over one lap he finished only 17th in the sprint and 13th in the main race, while team mate Lance Stroll was 13th and 15th across the two events.

“Some people are always quick in making conclusions,” said Krack when asked about the upgrades. “I think when you bring new parts to a sprint event, we’re very carefully weighing whether we should do that or not.

“I think we have to go away and keep cool, look at what we have brought, because we have also made some substantial changes throughout the weekend, see where this leads us, and take the right decisions for Mexico. But I would not write them off as quickly as that.”

Krack stressed that the Hermanos Rodrigue track is very different to COTA.

“Mexico is very low-speed based, it’s at altitude,” he said. “It’s much less bumpy. And you will have different problems than you have [in Austin].

“And this is applying to everybody, you see people going up and down in the ranking, where you think, ‘Oh, these guys have made a step’ and even the next day, they struggle more.

“So I think it’s something that you really need to stay open-minded with all the solutions. I’m sure we will make the right decisions on what package and what parts do we take to Mexico to get best possible results.”

Krack admitted that Aston is still trying to understand the AMR24.

“Many people ask you by race 19 or by race 18 or year three in this regulation, how can you still be learning?,” he said.

“But the cars are extremely complicated. They’re driving on the ground. If you see Sector 1 [in Austin], I’m sure you have seen the footage, how the whole thing is bouncing around, how unstable everything is for all the cars.

“And this is something that you really need to understand. So we are learning. You have to keep learning, and try to keep understanding how you can improve with the tools you have, the situations that you have on track.”

He added: “Sometimes you also take a direction where you think, ‘oh, maybe we go back.’ This has happened to us. This has happened to many teams. And it is about accumulating the learnings that you have had over the last two or three seasons.

“It is clear that all the teams have driven the envelope into areas where it is not so predictable anymore, and you have to really work cleverly – like, ‘How far do I go not to create problems, and still be somehow stable and driveable?’”

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How Lawson grid penalty allowed RB to “go a bit extreme”

RB took some risks on setup given Lawson’s penalty

RB Formula 1 team CEO Peter Bayer says that Liam Lawson’s grid penalty at the US GP allowed his engineers “to go a bit extreme” on the setup of his VCARB 01.

After a disappointing sprint the team tried something different heading into qualifying as it tried to optimise the latest upgrade package, which included a revised floor.

As Lawson was destined to start at the back of the grid due to his PU change penalty there was little to lose by taking a risk.

The changes worked and the New Zealander duly made his point by earning a token third place in Q1 before putting in a charging drive from 19th to ninth in the race itself.

In so doing he earned two valuable points on a weekend when Haas scored seven and moved ahead in the battle for sixth place in the championship.

“I said to Laurent [Mekies] on the pit wall it’s true we have lost the lead, but we have gained again performance,” Bayer told this writer. “And I think the guys, Alan [Permane] and the team, did a very, very good job in bringing this new floor.

“And especially what happened in qualifying with Liam, because they had no pressure on Liam’s car, and they went a bit extreme on the setup, just trying some stuff. And that’s really what unlocked a lot of performance.”

Bayer was full of praise for Lawson’s drive into the points.

“What a statement!,” he said. “First weekend in the car. And honestly, we thought that probably with the penalty that P3 in Q1, that was a high, and we should be proud and happy.

“Obviously he did a very good job in Turn 1, there with a bit of turmoil, and he kept it clean. And then, honestly, he was faultless in the end.

“He did very good laps, good pace. I think what played into his hands is that the overcut was a lot stronger than we thought.

“Obviously, with the hard, we were expecting to go long, but the way it turned out was definitely more than what we had calculated for.

“So that was great. And then in the end he was managing it really well. And he also said he felt very comfortable in the car. He was working a lot more with the switches than he usually would have done. Overall a very, very impressive performance.”

Bayer believes that despite dropping behind Haas in Austin RB will ultimately be able to recover sixth place.

“We have to be careful, but so far, we believe that we’re ready to fight until the end,” he said. “It’s a very long straight here. Also I felt in the debrief that the guys put their smiles back on their faces, and so they’re confident.

“To see that you have a car that when everything works well, and the driver is capable of exploiting that to the maximum, that you can put it on P3 in Q1 that gives me the confidence to take the fight to those guys.”

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Horner: Important for Red Bull to “get off the back foot” in Austin

Verstappen and Red Bull enjoyed a solid weekend in Austin

Christian Horner admits that it was important for his Red Bull Racing team to “get off the back foot” with a strong performance over the Formula 1 US GP weekend relative to rivals McLaren.

Helped by an upgrade package Max Verstappen won Saturday’s sprint race and then finished third in the main event, behind the two Ferraris.

He outscored Lando Norris for the first time since the summer break, extending his advantage by five points and ending a frustrating run for the team.

“I think it’s a combination of factors,” said Horner. “I think the team have worked very hard, and I think they’ve definitely added performance here. I think there’s more to understand, and more to fine tune.

“But I think coming off the back of Singapore it’s been a strong turnaround. We’ve outscored our nearest competitor in the drivers’ championship by five points this weekend. Three weeks ago, that looked very difficult.”

He added: “Five races to go now, and a 57-point lead. Nothing’s ever comfortable or assured, but it was important for us.

“This is the first time we’ve outscored Lando since I think Spa, so that was important for us to get off the back foot, and more onto the front foot.”

Expanding on what the latest upgrades have achieved Horner said they have helped to address the balance issues that have troubled Verstappen for much of the season.

“I think what it’s done is brought the balance a bit closer together,” he said. “So this disconnect between front and rear, it’s brought more of a balance into the car. And really, from the first lap, Max was much more competitive.

“He was much happier with the car as soon as we got here. So that’s encouraging for some of the races coming up as well. First part of this triple header, sprint race weekend as well, as I say, this is as much as we could have hoped for coming off the back of Singapore.”

However Horner acknowledged that Verstappen had struggled on the hard tyre in the second half of the main race in Austin.

“I think we seemed to engineer into the car a bit more understeer today, and that then sort of killed the front tyres,” he said.

“And compared to yesterday [in the sprint], where we didn’t have any understeer, the car was very quick.

“So we were quick enough to get the pole for the sprint, won the sprint, and had good degradation in the sprint, and the McLaren looked to be the one that was fading.

“Ferrari looked quick all weekend, in fairness. And then, arguably, we should have had the pole yesterday. We had a car that was very strong in quali. And then the weakest that we’ve been has been really on the hard tyre, with a bit too much understeer throughout the race.”

Regarding this weekend’s race in Mexico he said: “The form is moving from day-to-day, circuit-to-circuit. I think Ferrari have brought performance here.

“They’ve looked very strong, particularly in the race trim. It was interesting, obviously, they sacrificed perhaps a little in quality, to benefit in the race. And I’m sure they’ll be competitive in Mexico City.”

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Gasly: How Alpine “fell for it” after Haas “played their cards” in US GP

Gasly admits that Alpine didn’t get it right in Austin

Pierre Gasly says that his Alpine Formula 1 team didn’t “execute the race in the best way” after tumbling out of a potential top 10 finishing position in the US GP.

Having qualified an unexpected seventh Gasly gained a further place on the grid when George Russell was consigned to a pitlane start.

He held onto P6 in the initial stages of the race until Haas “played their cards” and pitted the chasing Kevin Magnussen early.

Gasly was called in to cover the Dane when he was still comfortable on his medium tyres and wanted to stay out.

A slow stop then also proved costly, and as Gasly tried to recover ground he picked up a five-second time penalty for gaining an advantage by going off track while battling with Ale Albon. He eventually finished out of the points in 12th.

“It wasn’t good enough,” he said when asked by this writer about his race. “We haven’t executed the race in the best way. We took a good start. I was in P6 managing the tyre, everything was looking good, and Haas obviously played their cards.

“They had two cars, they decided to put the pressure with one. And we just fell for it, and reacted when the medium was the better compound for the race, at least for us.

“We reacted to it, slow pit stop, lost four or five seconds in the pit, exited in the traffic, and just struggled massively on the hard.

“I mean, just felt like we’ve left too much time on the table today, and it wasn’t a well-executed race from our side. So obviously quite frustrating after putting ourselves in a strong position yesterday.”

He added: “There is some positive, there is clearly the qualifying, we have some potential. There are conditions where the car seems to work.

“The first stint felt like it was well-managed. The pace was there to hang on to that sixth place. The hard tyre was very bad.

“So yeah, clearly things to understand. Still I’m frustrated right now, but looking at where we were the last few races, there is definitely some improvement.”

Like other drivers Gasly questioned the penalty that he was handed by the stewards.

“I don’t agree with it,” he said. “I accept it, and that’s the FIA, at the end they always have the last word, but I’m sure we’re going to talk about it. And to me, I’m side-by-side with Alex at the apex, I expect him to at least leave me 20cms of race track, so I can leave my inside wheel on the line.

“But if he goes on the line, the best I can do is be on the kerb. So I tried the best I could to stay on track, hoping he was going to leave me some room. But then I’d rather avoid a contact. There was just no space for me there.”

Gasly acknowledged that still finishing 12th on a day when things went wrong at least indicated that the Austin update package was working.

“Yeah, that’s the positive,” he noted. “At the end today, we didn’t do the best job in the race, and still finish P12, not too far from P10.

“So it clearly gives us hopes that if we execute a stronger race in the last five, we might have one or two occasions to fight for that last point.

“Obviously frustrating as a team when you see Williams get that last point. And I do feel with different decisions, we could have been there, but that’s F1, and there are clearly some improvements overall for next year.

“It’s important to see that what we’re doing is paying off in terms of overall competitiveness. Now we just need to make sure we keep improving, and keep adding more performance to it.”

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Colapinto on the fastest lap that got away: “We were flying…”

Colapinto put in another charging performance in Austin

Franco Colapinto continued to impress his Williams team and the whole Formula 1 paddock by securing 10th place and a priceless point from 15th on the grid in Austin after running a long opening stint on the hard tyres.

He also held the fastest lap bonus point for a while with a time set in normal racing conditions before Alpine gave new tyres to Esteban Ocon in the closing laps in a successful effort to take it off the Williams driver.

Nevertheless it was another good weekend for the Argentinian, who was as high as eighth in SQ2, only to have a spin in SQ3 and then a frustrating run to 12th in the sprint itself.

“It was a very tough Saturday for us,” he said when asked by this writer about his weekend. “And I think we knew that we had the pace in the car to be strong, and to do a good race.

“That’s why I decided to start on the hard, to have a bit of clean air. I thought maybe was not ideal, but I knew that having the pace we had, it was going to be better for us, to really have that pace in the clean air, and do the jump on the track.

“When we were in clean air on the cars, we were really strong. And then once we put the mediums, we were flying.

“So it was great to see how we bounced back today and how we came back stronger after a very difficult day yesterday. It was a tough Saturday for the team, but they deserve the point of today, and they worked hard for it.”

Colapinto was philosophical about losing the fastest lap point to a clever move by Alpine.

“I think I did it many laps earlier on an older tyre, and I think we just had much better pace than them,” he said. “They just had to put a new set with low fuel to try to take it from us. I think they weren’t close to us in terms of pace.

“But look, it’s part of racing. I was happy for the fastest lap, and I wanted to keep it, but it’s fine. We had it for a while. It’s a point that we lost, but I’m sure that we are going to recover it soon.

“We had a good car, and we are capable of scoring points, so we’re going to come back stronger I’m sure.”

Colapinto admitted that he had much to learn during his first F1 sprint weekend.

“It was busy, you get quite burned out,” he said. “And it’s something I need to monitor a bit more, the timings I need to manage a bit more, the free times, and try to be a bit more relaxed in the moments that I can be, because it is very busy.

“You are under a lot of pressure all the time, and just need to try and understand how to manage a bit better in Brazil. But I think was a good experience to try and learn first of course here in Austin, and be stronger in Brazil.”

He is looking forward to racing in front of a Spanish-speaking crowd for the first time in Mexico this weekend.

“It’s going to be amazing,” he said. “Of course, they have Checo there, but I know that there will be Argentinians. Here this weekend it was insane. When we were moving on the truck, and doing the lap, everyone was like ‘how there are so many Argentinians? What’s happening?’

“And they were like, ‘Franco, Franco!’. It was very impressive, very nice to see. James [Vowles] is a bit worried. He says, ‘Take care, take care.’  It’s just a lot of things, and you’re racing, and you have a lot of pressure.

“I’m going to try to show how much I care to the fans to be there, and I’m going to enjoy, of course, my first race in Brazil, but also Mexico this weekend.”

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Piastri admits McLaren MCL38 was “very tricky all weekend” in Austin

Piastri had a relatively quiet race to fifth in Austin

Oscar Piastri says that his McLaren MCL38 “very tricky all weekend” after he started and finished the US GP in fifth position.

His team mate Lando Norris secured pole for Sunday’s race and finished fourth having been demoted from third by a penalty, thus ending a long run of podium finishes for the Woking outfit.

McLaren brought a package of upgrades to Austin, although Piastri did not have the new front wing that was on the sister car.

The Australian admitted that it was difficult to understand the car’s performance over the course of the weekend.

“It’s not been straightforward, that’s for sure,” he said. “I think today seemed a little bit more positive than yesterday. I think my pace relative to Lando, at least, was pretty similar for a lot of it.

“To be honest it’s not a complete surprise where we ended up, and where Ferrari ended up. I think Lando made us look more competitive than we were yesterday [in the sprint]. Fourth and fifth today is not completely unexpected.

“The car has been very tricky all weekend. I think over one lap it’s had potential to be quick, but trying to go unlock it has been incredibly tough, and then over the race, you can’t get away with the same things that you can over one lap, and the true pace really shows itself.”

Piastri had no explanation for why his pace picked up later in the race.

“I really don’t know,” he said. “Even the first two or three laps, both of us, it looked like we were really struggling to hang on to the pack ahead. The first 10-15, laps, we really struggled. Don’t know why.

“I was struggling a bit with the tyres, and they came back, and the medium looked very strong, considering it was pretty dead. So a bit of a confusing one to read. And I think even the pace in the second part of the race was maybe not amazing, but not terrible.

“So some things to try and understand, because e obviously can’t change the car from lap 15 to the rest of the laps! We need to understand why we suddenly found some pace.”

Piastri is hoping that Austin will prove to be the most difficult race for McLaren in the last part of the season.

“I hope this is our weakest of the [last] six,” he said. “We obviously had some good races at the tracks that are coming up last year, we had some bad races at some of the tracks coming up.

“I think in general, we should be a bit more competitive. We’re certainly not expecting Ferrari to be out of the picture for the rest of the year.

“They’ve kind of gone a little bit under the radar in the last few races, Monza they were obviously very quick, Baku was very, very tough to hold them back. And Singapore, I think, without their poor qualifying, they would have been very, very competitive.

“And this weekend is the same. This is not a completely unexpected result for them. We just need to try and turn that around next time.”

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Russell: F1 stewards must “apply common sense when needed”

Russell picked up a penalty during his charge through the field

Mercedes Formula 1 driver George Russell says that FIA stewards must “apply common sense when needed” after he was one of several drivers to be penalised for driving offences over the US GP weekend.

Russell was given a five-second penalty in Sunday’s main race for forcing Valtteri Bottas off track during his charge through the field from a pitlane start.

Although the penalty made no difference to his eventual sixth place finish, in common with other drivers and teams the GPDA director was somewhat frustrated by the call.

“I think the stewards have a really difficult job because the regulation is so large,” he said when asked about it by this writer.

“When you watch an incident in slow motion, or you pause it at a given point – my penalty with Valtteri, the rule states if you’re not ahead of the apex and you push someone wide, you get a penalty.

“So by the letter of the law, my penalty was correct. But anybody who knows racing, and anybody watching it, knows it was not correct.

“I don’t really know how we move forward. I think we’d probably all want to see probably the same stewards all year long, so that the drivers and the stewards can all be on the same page, and that we can apply common sense when needed, rather than having to really follow the letter of the law.”

Russell was obliged to start the race from the pitlane after his crash in Q3 damaged the upgraded floor and other parts on his W15.

With no spare set the team was obliged to work through the night to switch back to the earlier Montreal-spec floor, which meant that Russell dropped out of parc ferme, thus triggering the pitlane start.

He admitted that it wasn’t easy to deal with the impact of his mistake after the effort to bring the new parts to Austin.

“Yeah, really tough,” he said. “You feel as a driver you’re letting the whole team down when your sort of actions have such an impact on so many people, but there’s never any hard feelings.

“We’re all pushing the limits as a team to improve this car and get some big results. And when we are in that window, we’re there, when we’re not, it bites. And that happened to me yesterday. You saw it with Lewis today. He never makes mistakes, and the car just goes on us from nowhere.”

Russell was in the tricky situation of starting the main race having done no laps with the older aero spec.

“I had no idea what to expect going into today,” he admitted. “But clearly the pace was pretty good. I’m still confident that the upgrades were working as expected, and I really think we could have been fighting for probably a podium, if we had been in a normal starting position.

“So I think in the sprint race, I just destroyed my tyres, but clearly in those early laps yesterday, we had the pace, and we’ve shown glimmers of really strong pace this weekend. So let’s see what the coming races bring.”

He added: “I managed to change the setup a bit because of the parc ferme start. Nothing really to do with the upgrades. It’s pretty complicated to understand.”

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Vasseur: Austin race was “very well executed” by Ferrari

Ferrari enjoyed a perfect Sunday in Austin

Ferrari Formula 1 boss Fred Vasseur says that the US GP was “very well executed” by the Maranello team after Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz moved up from the second row to finish one-two.

From fourth on the grid Leclerc jumped into the lead at the start, while Sainz went from third to second on strategy.

The team showed good race pace throughout the weekend having found an optimum set-up that was kind to the tyres of the SF-24.

The result showed that earlier upgrades are now working well across a range of circuits.

“For sure we did a step forward after Monza, with Monza, Baku, Singapore,” said Vasseur. “But they are not conventional tracks, and it was probably a bit more important to be performant on this weekend, and we did a good job.

“It went well, mainly on the race pace, but in quali we struggled a little bit Friday and Saturday. But I’m very pleased with the result of the weekend, because at the end of the day, the car was okay, but we did also a very good job from the beginning to the end.

“Very well executed on the strategy, the pit stop, the start. Everything went well, and it’s a good weekend.”

Asked by this writer how satisfying it was to have such a perfect race and win from the second row he said: “It was not the plan and to start third and fourth! I would have preferred to start one and two.

“But it is like it is. I think Carlos was in a very good lap before the yellow flag or the red flag in quali, and I could have done the pole, but I think

“It was true also between Friday and Saturday, that we had a better pace on the race pace and the long stint than on the quali. It’s not a drama in Austin, because you have occasions to overtake, and it’s one of the tracks if you start third and fourth, then you have a good pace, you can still win the race.

“It’s not always true, and I’m not sure that it would be true on every single track until the end. I think that sometimes we will have to do another choice, and but I think this weekend was the good one.”

While Vasseur acknowledged that the team was missing qualifying pace in Austin, he indicated it wasn’t due to a specific weakness on the soft tyre relative to rivals.

“I’m not whether it’s related to the compound,” he said. “I think it’s more of the pace on one lap, but it’s also a choice in terms of a setup.

“Austin is also a strange one, because you have the first part very high-speed, bumpy, and the last part more load, low-speed, smooth, and you have to decide where you want to be competitive. And the same for the race.

“I think the other teams went a little bit in our direction between Saturday and Sunday, but we kept the advantage, and at least on the tyre deg, it’s big advantage to be in a good shape on the last part.”

Ferrari came to Austin with a stable package in terms of aero parts declared to the FIA, although Vasseur hinted that there were changes under the skin of the SF-24.

“You have to do it step-by-step,” he said. “And honestly, when you speak about upgrades, it’s what we are declaring, and that means that it’s aero, but performance is not only the external shape of the car. And everybody’s pushing, and we are pushing.

“I think honestly now we are the point of the development that when a team is bringing something, we are speaking about tenths of seconds, not more, and you have much more into the setup and so and sometimes.

“And it’s true, I think, from the beginning of the season, when the team is bringing something, it’s perhaps sometimes a step forward in terms of pure performance, but it’s also creating a bit of mess into the setup. And it’s not always a step forward in terms of results.”

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Horner: Norris US GP penalty was “a slam dunk”

Horner is adamant that Norris was in the wrong

Red Bull Racing boss Christian Horner says that the decision to hand a penalty to Lando Norris in Austin was “a slum dunk” and “black and white.”

The McLaren driver was docked five seconds for passing Max Verstappen off-track when they were fighting for third place in the closing laps of the race.

The penalty ensured that the positions were reversed after the chequered flag, with Norris falling back to fourth.

McLaren boss Andrea Stella admitted that his team thought Verstappen would be penalised for forcing Norris wide, but Horner is adamant that the FIA view was the correct one.

“First of all, the racing between the two of them was competitive and great to watch,” he said. “Obviously all the drivers know acutely what the rules are. They discuss these issues and particular corners in the briefings, with the various stewards and driver stewards and race director.

“The pass was made off track. We’ve been on the receiving end of that, in fact here I think, against Kimi [Raikkonen] in 2018. So for us, it was crystal clear that the pass had been made off the track.

“So he should have given the place back. He chose not to. So therefore there was a penalty. So for us, it was a very much a black and white scenario.”

Horner countered the suggestion that the decision should have been made after the race: “I think it was a slam dunk. And the problem is, again, we then have the arguments of you want the right people on the podium. It’s happened so many times that I actually think the stewards dealt with it pretty rapidly and decently today.”

Horner made it clear that he was surprised that Norris didn’t give the place back given that he had the potential to re-pass Verstappen.

“I think it’s very difficult for the stewards, and every incident is different,” he said. “So you have to look at every incident individually. When you’re on the receiving end of it, it’s not nice.

“As I say, we’ve been on the receiving end of it numerous times, not just at this track, but at other tracks. They all know what’s at stake.

“What I perhaps didn’t understand was it was clear there was going to be a penalty, or it looked pretty clear there was going to be a penalty with the car advantage and tyre advantage that McLaren had at that point of the race.

“It looked like he went to give the place back up at Turn 1, but there was some confusion there.

“If he’d have given the place back immediately, he would have probably, he probably would have had enough pace to make the pass.”

Regarding the lack of a penalty for Verstappen forcing Norris wide at the first corner he said: “Again, we discussed these many, many times. It goes back to Niki Lauda making an impassioned plea to Charlie Whiting of ‘just let them race.’

“And it was agreed then, for the first lap it used to be, now it’s very much the first corner, let them race. And that was a classic case of that. And they all know that.”

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Stella: McLaren thought FIA investigation would lead to Verstappen penalty

McLaren didn’t ask Norris to give back the place

McLaren Formula 1 boss Andrea Stella says that his team thought that the FIA’s investigation of the Lando Norris/Max Verstappen incident in the closing stages of the US GP would lead to a penalty for the Red Bull driver.

The team didn’t ask Norris to give back the third position, but it did tell the following Oscar Piastri to be aware that Verstappen up ahead might be getting a time penalty for forcing the Englishman wide.

McLaren also opted not to pit Piastri in order to grab the extra fastest lap point that was then held by Franco Colapinto, so that he remained in touch with Verstappen.

However instead of Verstappen being punished the five-second penalty was handed to Norris, dropping him back to fourth in the final standings.

Stella was adamant that Verstappen should have been deemed at fault, if anyone.

“I think the defending car goes just straight at the apex,” he said. “We checked the video multiple times. It’s just going straight. It’s just going off-track, as much as Lando is doing, just giving no chance for Lando to complete the manoeuvre.

“If I were a journalist, I would have done a bit of statistics – how many times Max has used this way for defending? Both cars go off track. So I think both cars are gaining an advantage, if there’s an advantage gained.

“So for us, this manoeuvre was at the least neutral, but when I saw that there was an under investigation, I was pretty sure that was because Max pushed Lando off the track.

“And in fact, we told immediately Oscar, make sure you close five seconds on Max, because there could be a position at stake. So the interpretation of this situation between McLaren and the stewards is polar opposite.”

Like Norris himself Stella questioned the urgency to decide on a penalty. Without talking to the drivers, given the high stakes.

“I am surprised that the stewards didn’t even feel the need to discuss with the drivers after the race, it is an uncertain situation, get the opinion of the drivers, get the time to assess the situation with the level of details that is required when the situation is not so clear.

“So where is the urgency to interfere with the result of a race with a championship cause, just because you have to make the decision in 60 seconds? It’s a question mark that I think the stewards should take constructively, positively. Is it really needed to make a decision so quickly, and in our opinion, so wrongly?

“It’s just the fact that you defend by going off-track. This cannot be permissible.”

Regarding the decision not to give the place back he added: “Under my responsibility, but there was complete agreement by all the people involved in this interpretation, this situation did not need to be investigated.

“And once we saw and if anything, we thought the investigation should be for Max pushing Lando off the track. And that’s what we thought was going to happen when we saw that the case was under investigation. So for us, there was no need to give back the position because of the situation.”

Stella admitted that the team was also frustrated by the first corner, where Verstappen ran Norris wide, and the McLaren driver tumbled to fourth behind the Ferraris.

“We were a little upset by the manoeuvre in corner one, because not only Max gained the position, but it cost the complete exit for Lando, and therefore losing the positions on both Ferraris.

“At the same time, we sort of understood that the stewards might have applied the first lap mitigating circumstances, and we accepted it, because we always have respect for the difficulties that the stewards operate under, but they should have respect for their job as well.

“And when the case is so difficult, like Lando and Max, just take the time, review it after the race, hear from the drivers, try to understand the subtleties. So I think the first lap, first corner can be mitigated by the first lap interpretation. But I think this one for me is really difficult to understand, more than the one in the first lap.”

Stella countered the suggestion that Norris could be more aggressive in his encounters with Verstappen.

“I would not say that Lando is to be more aggressive,” he said. “I think anytime you have this kind of duel on track, you learn a little bit. But I don’t think Lando should change the fundamental way he goes on this kind of overtaking or defending manoeuvres.

“There’s some technicalities that possibly can be reviewed. But I think in this case, if it was in this lap, it could have been the next lap, Lando would have been successful in his manoeuvre.

“So I don’t think you need to change, become aggressive at the risk of not finishing the race. Obviously, Max has a lot of experience.

“We’re talking about a very, very capable driver. I’m not disrespecting this. Max is outstanding, and in this case, the message that McLaren are giving is that there was no need for the stewards to interfere with the situation or not under the urgency of deciding during the race.”

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