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LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Antonelli on provisional pole by 0.001s from Verstappen

Formula 1
Monaco GP
LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Antonelli on provisional pole by 0.001s from Verstappen

MotoGP Hungarian GP: Marquez dominates sprint for comeback win

MotoGP
Hungarian GP
MotoGP Hungarian GP: Marquez dominates sprint for comeback win

F1 Monaco GP: Antonelli topples Leclerc and Hamilton to head final practice

Formula 1
Monaco GP
F1 Monaco GP: Antonelli topples Leclerc and Hamilton to head final practice

BTCC Oulton Park: Audi quickest after Fords take boost cut

BTCC
Oulton Park (Island Circuit)
BTCC Oulton Park: Audi quickest after Fords take boost cut

The “totally alien” challenge Turkington is taking on

National
The “totally alien” challenge Turkington is taking on

MotoGP Hungarian GP: Marquez beats Acosta to sensational pole

MotoGP
Hungarian GP
MotoGP Hungarian GP: Marquez beats Acosta to sensational pole

Why the anticipation in the run-up to the Le Mans 24 Hours feels a bit different this year

Feature
WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
Why the anticipation in the run-up to the Le Mans 24 Hours feels a bit different this year

LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Antonelli tops FP3 from Leclerc and Hamilton

Formula 1
Monaco GP
LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Antonelli tops FP3 from Leclerc and Hamilton

Lotus says F1 German GP safety car ruined victory hopes

Lotus believes that the safety car was the key factor that cost it victory in the German Grand Prix

Kimi Raikkonen and Romain Grosjean appeared well placed to beat eventual victor Sebastian Vettel at the Nurburgring, but in the end the Red Bull driver had just enough speed to secure an emotional home win.

Although Raikkonen has questioned the team's late call to bring him in to the pits for a change on to soft tyres, Lotus boss Eric Boullier thinks it was not that moment - but rather the safety car earlier in the race - that cost it.

"The safety car did not help on this," Boullier told AUTOSPORT, referring to the fact that Grosjean was on fresher rubber than Vettel at that stage of the race.

"We had to rebuild the strategy a little bit after the safety car.

"Also remember after the first pitstop, when Kimi was struck behind [Lewis] Hamilton, we lost three or four seconds and that cost us a lot."

Boullier said that the team's afternoon was further compounded by radio communication problems with Raikkonen.

The Finn could hear what the team was saying but his feedback was not being picked up by his team in certain areas of the track.

This left the team unsure about the exact state of Raikkonen's tyres, and whether or not it was risking a repeat of the 2012 Chinese GP when the Finn slumped down the order in the closing stages.

"We lost radio with Kimi at the beginning of the race," Boullier said. "It didn't put us in a comfortable position [near the end], and we all remember very well Shanghai in 2012.

"We could see his pace was dropping a little bit and we had the space to stop, so we did it.

"Both cars were then on different tyres and we could see easily that Kimi was picking up the pace, although not as much as we expected on the tyres.

"We could see the new option was working better than the scrubbed, and it seems it was the right decision to allow to Kimi to try to catch up with Sebastian."

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