FIA's Charlie Whiting explains various Japanese GP penalty decisions

Formula 1 race director Charlie Whiting has explained the r♑easoning behind the ste♛wards' decisions in Sunday's Japanese Grand Prix following a number of on-track incidents that resulted in investigations.

The stewards opted to look into four major incidents through the race, handing out t🌠hree five-second time penalties, two of which in fact stemmed from the same incident.

Whiting explains Japanese GP penalty decisions

Formula 1 race director Charlie Whiting has explained the reasoning behind the stewards' decisions in Sunday's Japanese Grand Prix following a number of on-track incidents that resul🍨ted in investi𒆙gations.

The stewards opted to look into four major incidents through the race, handing out three five-second time penalties, two of which in fact stemmed from the same inc🐠ident.

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The stand-out collision came between Sebastian Vettel and Max Verstappen on Lap 8 as🍬 the pair fought for third position, with conta🐎ct being made on the run to Spoon.

Vettel tried passing Verstappen up the inside,🅠 only to spin and drop back to 19th. He was able to recover to sixth, but now sits 67 points off the lead of the drivers' champi🌟onship after Lewis Hamilton took his sixth victory in seven races.

The collision was looked into♕ by the stewards, but Whiting explained af🤪ter the race that it was seen as a “bit of a classic” racing incident, prompting no further action.

“Seb tried to get up the insid𒆙e, it was a reasonable move, got halfway alongside, Max turned in - a bit👍 of a classic really,” Whiting explained.

“As you know stewards don’t normally give penalties unless they are sure one driver was who♚lly or predominantly to blame. Opinions will vary whether it was equal blame, but certainly no driver was predominantly to blame.”

Verstappen compared the collision after the race to his previous run-in with Vettel at the Chinese Grand Pr🎃ix back in April, when he was hit with a 10-second time penalty after causing contact th💫at sent both cars into a spin.

How🍬ever, Whiting did not see the clash at Suzuka in the same way.

“That was at the hairpiဣn, he came charging down the inside into the hairpin and almost T-boned Seb. I don’t 🙈think there was any similarity between those two,” Whiting said.

“I haven’t had🅷 a look at the one from China yet, but my recollection of that incident was that it was a very clear case of causing a collision. I think what Sebastian was doing was a genuine attempt to overtake, and I think what Max was doing in China was opportunistic at best.”

While Verstappen avoided any action for that clash, he had by that point already been hit with a five-second time penalty for running Kimi Raikkonen off the road wh🌠ile trying to defend third place in the opening states of the race.

After locking up at the chicane, Verstappen ran deep, forcing Raikkonen onto the kerb and causing the Ferrari driver to lose a place to Vettel. The stewards felt Verstappen had rejoined the track 💜unsafely, resulting in the penalty, which the Dutchman called “ridiculous” after the race.

“The first one was quite clearly a penalty, because Max went off the track and rejoined tౠhe tr🌞ack unsafely,” Whiting said.

“You’re required to rejoi🙈n safely and Kimi was there and he pushed him off the track. I think that was a fairly straightforward one for the stewards.”

Whiting explains Japanese GP penalty decisions

MAGNUSSEN-LECLERC CLASH ‘UNFORTUNATE’

Kevin Magnussen was forced to retire from the race early on following contact with Charles Leclerc as the two battled for 12th position. Leclerc’s front wing touched the rear of Magnussen’s car after the Haas driver triedౠ to dive past into Turn 1, resulting in contact.

Leclerc called Magnussen “stupid” for making a “dangerous” move, but Whiting revealed after the race that the stewards saw both drivers tried to change position at💯 almost exactly the same time, resulting in the incident. No action was taken for it.

“It was in two bits ♍as yoꦫu know, on the straight and then in the corner. He got the puncture in the first one,” Whiting said.

“If you analyse it very, very carefully, what you see is two cars coming down with Kevin not moving, and then Charles catches, catches, catches, h𓃲e decides to go to the right, and at exactly the same time, on the video, one frame, there’s one frame difference, then Kevin moves.

“I think it’ღs impossible to say that Kevin blocked him, it was just he made the decision that he was going to go right, fractionally after Charles had. You had to look at it quite a few times and analyse it in little detail to see that, but I think that it’s just unfortunate, and that’s what the stewards felt.”

Whiting explains Japanese GP penalty decisions

‘PRETTY CLEAR’ ALONSO GAINED ADVANTAGE

The final big incident from the race was between Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso on ꧒the opening lap of the race, with both drivers receiving five-second time penalties.

Stroll was seen to have forced Alonso off the track at 😼the entry to the chicane when defending his position, having passed the Spaniard on the run from Spoon. The move was deemed dangerous, resulting in the Willi꧒ams driver receiving a penalty.

However, as A꧟lonso opted to run straight across the gravel at the chicane instead of using the run-off area, gaining a position from Stroll in the process, he too was hit with a five-second penalty🌟. After the race, Alonso said the penalty was “random” and proved “how bad Formula 1 is.”

“I think the stewards felt it was perfectly clear what Fernando did. He cut the chicane, drove quickly across the gravel, came back on welꦦl in front,” Whit🌳ing said.

“I think that was pretty clear that he had gained an advantage by leaving the track. The stewards however felt that Stroll had act🐠ually forced Fernando off. You couldn’t say that because Fernando was forced off, he was entitled to cut the chicane. He wasn’t. He shouldn’t have taken the place by doing it.

“B♑ut equally, Stroll🌌 shouldn’t have pushed him off the track. They felt that each driver should be given a five-second penalty for two separate offences.

“If he’d given back the position, I don’t think Fernando would have be🌠en penalised. That would have been straightforward. I think the second time he did it, he did give the place bac♛k to Brendon Hartley, but he didn’t on that occasion.”

Alonso received one penalty point on his FIA Super License for t𒀰he incident, taking him up to three for the 12-month period. Stroll received two penalty points, leaving him on six for the last year, while Verstappen is now up to eight points. Any driver receiving 12 points in 12 months receives an automatic one-race ban.

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