Whiting Slams Inattentive Vettel in Austin

Published 10/25/2018, 7:10 AM EDT

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The race stewards in Texas were particularly merciless during the weekend. They demoted Sebastian Vettel by three places for not slowing enough under red flags. Naturally, this caused much consternation for the driver, and split opinions amongst fans and pundits alike.

Vettel was understandably annoyed at seeing his hopes slip even further away. However, FIA race director Charlie Whiting sees it as a clear cut decision.

“The rule is quite simple”

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Grand Prix stewards Gerd Ennser (Germany), Dennis Dean (USA), Silvia Bellot (Spain) and Derek Warwick (England) applied the penalty ‘keeping consistent’ to earlier penalties. As a result, Sebastian Vettel was relegated to fifth. He then went on to finish the race fourth with Lewis Hamilton third.

The stewards deemed Vettel’s slowing under red flag conditions not sufficient, giving them no choice in their eyes.

via Imago

The driver remonstrated to the press claiming:

“The red flag came out, and I’m off the accelerator – but in the eyes of the stewards it wasn’t quick enough or for long enough.

“In their opinion, it took me 27.7 seconds to get off the throttle. The distance to the car in front has grown during this time, but it also depends on where you are on the track.

“This system has its flaws and gaps. In addition, there were probably problems with the measuring loops in the morning.

“But for the stewards, the case is pretty clear, hence my penalty. ”

“I am convinced that I took enough speed off. Clearly I saw the flags, clearly I went off the gas, then I looked out, because I expected that somewhere a car stuck in the wall, that was in the area of ​​the curves 9 and 10.

“Of course I know the rules in such a case, so I slowed down. In my eyes, enough, in the eyes of the stewards not. They thought I had waited too long. ”

“The interpretation of the rules should be acted with common sense. It should not be around 27.7 seconds.

via Imago

“That’s wrong. I slowed down, I looked around. I should have slowed to 30 km / h to reduce my speed, then I would have done the rule.

“But then maybe someone behind would crash into my car. That can not be the point of this rule.

“I think I have done enough. The commissars disagree, there’s nothing more to say about it. ”

Charlie Whiting thinks : It’s pretty easy to adhere to the red flag rules, even for a four-time champion.

“The regulation is crystal clear, every driver knows it, that was just a driver error.”

“We have now had three cases in which drivers did not comply with the rules.

“Once Daniel Ricciardo in Australia, once Esteban Ocon in Japan and then Vettel in Texas.

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“If we have a virtual safety car phase in the race, then the drivers stick to the speed standard.

“Why does not work with red flags from time to time, is beyond me. You can not miss it, all the video boards around the circuit are clearly red.

“Vettel just did not pay enough attention in America. ”

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“We will stick to this – not slowing enough under the red flag, that’s not a trivial offense for us.

“The drivers can talk themselves out the way they want, it just will not work.”

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Written by:

Dhruv George

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Dhruv George is a senior Formula One and NASCAR analyst for EssentiallySports, having authored nearly 12000 articles spanning different sports like F1, NASCAR, Tennis, NFL, and eSports. He graduated with a PG Diploma in Journalism from the Xavier Institute of Communications. Dhruv has also conducted interviews with F1 driver Pierre Gasly and Moto2 rider Tony Arbolino.
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