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Ex-F1 driver Felipe Massa defends his views on IndyCar safety

Ex-Formula 1 driver Felipe Massa has defended his decision to speak out against IndyCar safety standards following Robert Wickens's serious crash at Pocono in August

Wickens suffered severe injuries and is undergoing rehabilitation in Indianapolis after recently speaking publically for the first time since the accident.

Massa took to social media to question IndyCar's safety track record, with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing's Graham Rahal leading a subsequent backlash against Massa's comments.

As part of the response, leading IndyCar figures also highlighted developments such as the improved safety structures on the 2018 car and the series using the energy-absorbing SAFER barrier on oval circuits.

But Massa, who will race for Venturi in Formula E in the upcoming season, says he "doesn't understand" why he received criticism for his comments.

"We saw so many drivers getting hurt and I'm just saying what I see for the safety of the drivers," Massa told Autosport.

"I didn't expect so many drivers saying that what I said was not correct."

Massa pointed to Scott Dixon's huge crash in the 2017 Indianapolis 500 and Sebastien Bourdais' injury in qualifying for that event as reasons for his viewpoint.

"I don't race in IndyCar, I don't know day-by-day what they're doing, this is clear," he said.

"But when I see that they are racing [at] Indianapolis, [for example] when Fernando Alonso was racing [in 2017] and I think Scott Dixon was really lucky and Bourdais got hurt really bad.

"Then you go into the year after and we see a race in Pocono and what happens with Robert Wickens.

"For me it was a huge accident and what I'm saying is that maybe IndyCar, they need to think about these tracks and they need to think about improving these tracks.

"If you see Formula 1, maybe they even change sometimes a little bit too much [for safety], but if you see what happens to Jules [Bianchi], that accident will not happen anymore because they changed so many things after that accident.

"So when I think maybe after [Wickens's] accident they need to think about changing something.

"I just say what I believe is something that they need to [do].

"I'm not saying they're not doing anything, I'm saying that just maybe they didn't do enough because we've seen many drivers getting hurt."

When asked why he felt the need to comment on IndyCar safety, Massa said: "I didn't speak about it, I just said maybe they need to think about it a little bit more.

"I just said that I saw the race with the walls very low, with the fans just next to the wall.

"I don't think it's really so expensive to change something on this point of view. So, that's what I said.

"But anyway, if they believe I am crazy... I'm just saying [it] for the safety of the drivers."

IndyCar has not responded to a request for comment regarding Massa's viewpoint at the time of publication.

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