The Herald - Herald Sport

Drivers disagree as FIA intervene on porpoising

- PHILIP DUNCAN

LEWIS HAMILTON says he feels “a little bit shorter” heading into the Canadian Grand Prix after his porpoising issues in Baku, but Max Verstappen has hit out at the decision to alter regulation­s in the middle of the season.

Formula One’s regulator has vowed to “reduce or eliminate” porpoising on the advice of its medical team, just days after seven-time world champion Hamilton suffered with severe back pain in the Azerbaijan Grand Prix. Hamilton, 37, required assistance to get out of his Mercedes after his car bounced up and down at high speed throughout Sunday’s 51-lap race.

A statement from F1’s governing body, released on Wednesday ahead of this weekend’s race in Canada, read: “The FIA, as the governing body of the sport, has decided that, in the interests of safety, it is necessary to intervene to require that the teams make the necessary adjustment­s to reduce or to eliminate this phenomenon [of porpoising].”

Hamilton underwent acupunctur­e and cryotherap­y to make sure he was fit enough to drive in Montreal but is still feeling the consequenc­es almost a week on.

“Putting the technical stuff aside, just to reiterate, I cannot stress more how important health is,” he said. “We have got an amazing sport here but safety has to be paramount, it has to be the most important thing.

“I can definitely feel that I am a little bit shorter this week and my discs are definitely not in the best shape right now and that is not good for longevity.

“It is positive that the FIA are working towards improving it because we have this car for the next few years. It is not about coping with the bouncing for the next few years, it is about completely getting rid of it and fixing it so that future drivers, all of us, don’t have back problems moving forward.

“I don’t think it is going to change much in performanc­e, but I might be wrong. Who knows? We’ll see.”

Verstappen, who pipped Hamilton to the title last season in dramatic fashion, leads the current championsh­ip standings and extended his advantage with victory on the streets of Baku. The Red Bull cars suffer much less with bouncing on the straights and Verstappen is not keen on regulation­s being changed mid-season.

“For me, regardless if it is going to help or work against us, rule changes in the middle of the year I don’t think it is correct,” the Dutchman said.

“I understand the safety part of it, but I think if you talk to every engineer in the paddock, if you raise your car you will have less issues anyway.

“It is very simple, just go up on ride height and you won’t have these issues. It is basically a little bit complicate­d and I also think it will be very hard to police.

“We are willing to take risks, that is our sport, that is what I love to do. The porpoising we have at the moment is not nice and not correct, but we don’t need to over-dramatise.”

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