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

Drivers Call for Caution on New Penalties

The decision by the FIA to drop drivers 10 places down the grid if they are guilty of 'dangerous driving' was greeted with caution from the drivers in the press conference at Interlagos, Brazil, on Thursday.

The decision by the FIA to drop drivers 10 places down the grid if they are guilty of 'dangerous driving' was greeted with caution from the drivers in the press conference at Interlagos, Brazil, on Thursday.

The FIA coincidentally introduced the rule following an accident in the Malaysian Grand Prix, in which Juan Pablo Montoya was punished for what was later adjudged a 'racing incident' at the start of the Sepang race.

But Brazilian Rubens Barrichello led the calls for the sport's governing body, the FIA, to be cautious of their decisions on the ruling, which will be brought into force for this weekend.

"I feel that for the show it might be a good thing to see a competitive car moved ten positions back, and you are going to see some overtaking," said Barrichello.

"But if you talk about Monte Carlo it is going to be impossible and someone is going to be really penalised for that. So we have to be really sure the guy did something to move him backwards otherwise it is not fair."

Arrows driver Enrique Bernoldi warned of problems defining who is at fault in a crash and insisted that the FIA be careful when they judge racing incidents.

"It's difficult to judge who is at fault if two cars crash," warned Bernoldi. "If somebody blocks you deliberately, then maybe you can see a little bit.

"But if two cars are side by side and crash then it's difficult to say who is at fault. I think being able to judge will be quite difficult."

The problem appears to be that there are no permanent stewards governing in all races, so there is inconsistency in the decisions made at different Grands Prix, and Barrichello called for the FIA to introduce a system which removed this problem.

"We've been asking the FIA to do that, to bring the same guys who know us to all the races," he said. "We have to have a stable vision of what is going on because otherwise it's going to be really unfair."

Previous article Button: I Haven't Changed
Next article Reynard Motorsport Placed into Receivership

Top Comments