Daily News

F1 tyre test cancelled for security reasons

- ALAN BALDWIN

LONDON: Pirelli and McLaren have cancelled a Formula One tyre test scheduled for the Brazilian Grand Prix circuit after teams were targeted by armed robbers in Sao Paulo over the weekend.

A robbery attempt on a Pirelli van after Sunday’s race, which was thwarted by the team’s security staff, was the latest of a string of incidents involving Formula One personnel at Interlagos.

Four-times world champion Lewis Hamilton had called on Formula One to act after mechanics from his Mercedes team were robbed at gunpoint in their mini-van as they left Interlagos on Friday.

The Briton, who was not present at the time, said shots were fired and a gun pointed at one person’s head before valuables were taken.

Sunday’s attack on the Pirelli van took place after security had supposedly been tightened at the track.

“Following a robbery attempt, neutralise­d by Pirelli security, on a Pirelli van at the Interlagos circuit last Sunday... it has been decided to cancel the tyre test,” Pirelli said.

The decision was taken with McLaren, who were due to test Pirelli’s 2018 tyres with British teenager Lando Norris and Belgian Stoffel Vandoorne today and tomorrow, and the governing FIA “in the interest of the safety of the personnel”.

McLaren’s executive director Zak Brown said the team had put in place additional security measures before the test was called off.

The FIA, whose staff were also targeted on Friday, had promised “heavy police reinforcem­ents” for the weekend.

Despite that, Sauber strategy engineer Ruth Buscombe said a team van was targeted late on Saturday.

The Interlagos Circuit has a history of such attacks.

Unlike regular team staff, race drivers travel to and from their hotels with police escorts and in bulletproo­f cars.

Britain’s Jenson Button was in a car that was attacked outside the circuit in 2010, a year after he won the world championsh­ip, but his police driver smashed through the traffic to escape.

“There’s a huge amount of traffic flowing in and out at peak times and, unfortunat­ely, it provides an opportunit­y for these situations,” Mike Collier, McLaren’s head of human performanc­e said.

“There is clearly a huge amount of poverty as well and when the race teams arrive, they come with a huge amount of assets and wealth.”–

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