Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Honda details "countermeasures" for Miami GP after horror start to F1 2026 with Aston Martin

Formula 1
Miami GP
Honda details "countermeasures" for Miami GP after horror start to F1 2026 with Aston Martin

Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

General
Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

VR46: 'Plan A' is to keep di Giannantonio for MotoGP 2027

MotoGP
Spanish GP
VR46: 'Plan A' is to keep di Giannantonio for MotoGP 2027

What Apple TV’s Miami Grand Prix coverage means for the future of F1 in the U.S.

Formula 1
Miami GP
What Apple TV’s Miami Grand Prix coverage means for the future of F1 in the U.S.

Top 10 worst follow-ups to title-winning F1 cars

Feature
Formula 1
Top 10 worst follow-ups to title-winning F1 cars

How the MotoGP 2027 rider market impacts the energy drink sponsorship landscape

MotoGP
How the MotoGP 2027 rider market impacts the energy drink sponsorship landscape

Hill's 1996 F1 title - in Autosport covers

Feature
Formula 1
Hill's 1996 F1 title - in Autosport covers

Bottas' mental health column is brutal, but also shows how F1 is changing

Feature
Formula 1
Miami GP
Bottas' mental health column is brutal, but also shows how F1 is changing

McLaren not worried that Button and Perez battle will lead to feud

McLaren is not worried that the battle between Jenson Button and Sergio Perez at the Bahrain Grand Prix will boil over in to a feud

Button was left fuming at the aggressive manner in which Perez attacked him over the course of their scrap at Sakhir, with the pair making light contact and banging wheels.

McLaren admitted that Perez had gone a step too far when his front wing brushed Button's rear wheel at one point, but the team was happy to not call off the fight.

And although both men criticised the other for how robust they were, McLaren team principal Martin Whitmarsh thinks a line will be drawn under the matter before the next race in Spain.

"I have spoken to Jenson now and the thing is he is so mature in his attitude," explained Whitmarsh.

"That is the good thing about Jenson. He can stand back and be reflective in a way that you cannot when you are hot and sticky after just stepping out of the cockpit.

"Very quickly he gets to that point where, because he is an intelligent guy, he will know that Sergio is not a bad guy."

Whitmarsh believes that Perez's approach to the race was a reflection of the pressure he has come under in his early races for McLaren.

"Jenson knows his team-mate has been under the hammer," he said.

"He [Perez] is young, he has had a bit of pressure, he has something to learn and he had a point to prove.

"He was just a guy under pressure who possibly pushed a little bit too hard on some of those issues, but that is human.

"They are easy guys to manage because they are really good people, and there is a good spirit between all parts of the team.

"We are racers and each half of the garage wants to beat the other half, but I think it is a good dynamic."

Previous article Bahrain GP: Lotus insists it is not kicking itself over defeat
Next article Nico Rosberg: tyre fix a 'massive mission' for Mercedes

Top Comments

Latest news