The Citizen (KZN)

Sanitisati­on taken too far

DEMERITS: REGULATED FOR FAIR PLAY, SAFETY

- John Floyd

Reaching a point drivers stop pushing the limit out of fear of getting banned.

One thing that is dead certain in Formula One – the weekend in Latin America, is totally unpredicta­ble. It is full of obscure incidents and issues from day one.

Who will head the grid, who will guarantee the safety car will be employed and who will screw up their predetermi­ned strategy? No prizes for guessing that this year.

Finally, the weather gods' method of making a mockery of long-distance forecastin­g, ensuring not one of the pundits’ prediction­s would be correct. Welcome to the Brazilian Grand Prix.

In last weekend’s race, all the above conditions came together.

Who would have picked the Haas of Kevin Magnussen to be in pole position at the start of the sprint race?

The team’s and the Dane’s first pole following a good decision to get him on track before the rain hit and a great drive to the fastest possible time before the rest of the field had even selected their rubber for the conditions.

Sadly, eighth place was the result of the sprint for Magnussen and an early retirement due to the accident damage on the first lap which put paid to his aspiration­s.

I still have grave misgivings regarding the Friday qualifying session on a sprint weekend, when you still have to “qualify” during the sprint race to decide your Grand Prix grid position.

And if all goes the way of Liberty Media and the FIA, we will endure no fewer than six such weekends in 2023.

Following the incident between Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and the stewards’ subsequent decision of a five-second penalty for the Dutchman, I’m once again left wondering what happened to close-quarter racing and the thrill of wheel-to-wheel battles.

Sadly, the new dispensati­on of F1 appears to be set on regulating and sanitising the sport to a level of total “fair play” and safety.

We may now be reaching a situation where drivers will no longer push to the limit for fear of being adjudged guilty of causing an incident, resulting in a time penalty and added demerit points on their super license?

I would relish a replay of the Hamilton/Verstappen coming together, where both drivers could race on while giving vent to their feelings in a colourful manner, without the threat of the Sword of Damocles hanging over their heads. That would be racing…

But, if a competitor reaches 12 points within a 12-month period, he will receive a one-race ban.

All well and good when points are awarded for causing crashes, but most are given for exceeding track limits.

George Russell, as a director of the Grand Prix Drivers Associatio­n, has urged the FIA to review F1’s penalty points system. He is supported by most drivers, all agreeing if it is not dangerous or reckless it should not be punished by a possible ban.

A case in point is AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly who sits on 10 points, most from the track limit ruling. Russell does not believe the young Frenchman is a “dangerous” driver and proposes a clause allowing the reversal of such points when the award of such does not place anyone at risk.

Let us hope sanity will prevail.

 ?? ??
 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? RED-LETTER MOMENT. George Russell celebrates his maiden F1 full race win in Sao Paulo last Sunday.
Picture: Getty Images RED-LETTER MOMENT. George Russell celebrates his maiden F1 full race win in Sao Paulo last Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa