Cape Argus

Brawn praises Masi after Saudi chaos

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FORMULA One managing director Ross Brawn has defended race director Michael Masi after criticism of the Australian’s handling of Sunday’s chaotic Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

Masi has taken flak from both sides as Mercedes’ seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen fight for the title, with the pair tied on points ahead of Sunday’s final winner-takes-all showdown in Abu Dhabi.

“I’d like to compliment the FIA and ... Masi in handling well what was an extremely difficult race,” Brawn wrote in a column for the F1 website yesterday.

“I know some people feel some of the decisions were controvers­ial but I don’t ... I think Michael dealt with it pragmatica­lly.”

In Jeddah, a twice-halted race won by Hamilton, Masi offered Red Bull the opportunit­y to drop Verstappen from first to third on the grid at the restart and avoid being referred to the stewards with the risk of a penalty. Red Bull team boss Christian Horner said afterwards that it was unusual and sounded “a bit like being down the souk (local market)”.

Brawn said it was a quick and simple solution to a situation. “Some people seem to think Michael was doing a deal. He wasn’t doing a deal,” he said. “It was simple: you accept the decision of the race director, with a known outcome, or it gets passed to the stewards to handle it.”

Verstappen was handed two separate time penalties in Jeddah for track misdemeano­urs, and Horner said later the sport was missing Charlie Whiting, Masi’s universall­y-respected predecesso­r who died before the 2019 season.

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff has also clashed with Masi, speaking of “laughable” decisions at last month’s Sao Paulo Grand Prix when stewards took no action against Verstappen for a move that forced Hamilton off.

Sunday’s race at Yas Marina will be only the second time in F1 history that two drivers have gone into a decider level on points.

The first was at the 1974 US Grand Prix when Brazilian Emerson Fittipaldi beat Swiss driver Clay Regazzoni. | Reuters

 ?? | AFP ?? RED Bull’s Max Verstappen and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton.
| AFP RED Bull’s Max Verstappen and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton.

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