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

Hamilton, Toyota, Marquez: Three motorsport giants still writing history

Feature
Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Hamilton, Toyota, Marquez: Three motorsport giants still writing history

Racing Line spot-on for big rise in Autosport National Rankings

National
Racing Line spot-on for big rise in Autosport National Rankings

Why Gasly's Monaco GP penalty saga risks a regulatory labyrinth with no way out for F1

Formula 1
Why Gasly's Monaco GP penalty saga risks a regulatory labyrinth with no way out for F1

Alex Marquez to return to MotoGP action a month after horror Barcelona crash

MotoGP
Czech GP
Alex Marquez to return to MotoGP action a month after horror Barcelona crash

FIA president sets timeline on new WRC commercial rights holder

WRC
Rally Greece
FIA president sets timeline on new WRC commercial rights holder

Peugeot to upgrade 9X8 Hypercar for 2027 WEC

WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
Peugeot to upgrade 9X8 Hypercar for 2027 WEC

Why we should get ready for a dramatic F1 silly season

Feature
Formula 1
Why we should get ready for a dramatic F1 silly season

Will Mercedes stop its drivers fighting now with Hamilton chasing?

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Will Mercedes stop its drivers fighting now with Hamilton chasing?

Dennis calls for safety car rule change

McLaren boss Ron Dennis criticised Formula One's new safety car rules after an accident-strewn Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday

McLaren's Lewis Hamilton won the race but Dennis was still unhappy with regulations that close the pitlane for the first lap after the safety car is deployed to allow all cars to bunch up.

The rule change was designed to prevent drivers speeding up to get back to the pits for refuelling at a time when there is obvious danger on the track.

The safety car was deployed four times at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on Sunday.

"I was genuinely frustrated by the impact of the safety car on our race," Dennis told reporters. "This is something that has been raised by the Grand Prix Drivers' Association as being unfair on drivers because it is out of the teams' control.

"It is one of those changes that was made for good reasons but has had too much of a repercussion on this race and will have on other races.

"I hope the FIA and the other teams will learn from today and that we can do a mid-season regulatory change to avoid penalising other drivers in the future, because it could be anybody caught out by it."

Fernando Alonso was penalised for entering the pitstop just as the first safety car was deployed, but Dennis emphasised any other driver could have been in the same situation.

"It just doesn't work for Formula One," he said. "How silly would we have looked if we had run out of fuel because of the safety car? It is just so unfair, not just on us, but on anyone."

Ferrari's Felipe Massa and Renault's Giancarlo Fisichella were disqualified after leaving the pit while the safety car was on circuit and Brazilian Massa agreed the rule was unfair.

"I didn't do anything wrong and I find my disqualification absurd and utterly mistaken," he said.

"What was I supposed to do? The safety car was out there but, like others, I had gone in to fill up and then come out again. I never saw the red light that myself and Fisichella were disqualified for.

"What sense does it make? Was I supposed to stay stopped while the race went on?"

Previous article Trulli shocked by Kubica's crash
Next article Grapevine: Paddock Life - Montreal edition

Top Comments