Not exact matches
As fewer penalties are getting handed out in the
races with the aim of encouraging close
racing, it seems like the
stewards are having to make up their quota elsewhere.
Things weren't quite
as they seemed though, and at the next
race in Malaysia it was announced that after further investigation Hamilton and McLaren had been found to have deliberately misled the
stewards in order to get Trulli penalised.
Just
as the
race looked to be well on the way to becoming a pretty uneventful one, the safety car came out so that
stewards could clear away Kvyat's stricken Toro Rosso.
The very idea of a
racing incident has fallen by the wayside
as stewards have tended to look for which driver is «the most guilty», which is not the same thing
as a driver who is «completely guilty».
Following the
race Salo's Wikipedia page was cheekily edited with all sorts of crazy conspiracy theories, such
as: «As a steward of the FIA he helped Ferrari by giving Max Verstappen unreasonable penalties,» and «Mika Salo is rumoured to be involved in the largest FIA corruption scandal of 2016/2017.&raqu
as: «
As a steward of the FIA he helped Ferrari by giving Max Verstappen unreasonable penalties,» and «Mika Salo is rumoured to be involved in the largest FIA corruption scandal of 2016/2017.&raqu
As a
steward of the FIA he helped Ferrari by giving Max Verstappen unreasonable penalties,» and «Mika Salo is rumoured to be involved in the largest FIA corruption scandal of 2016/2017.»
Sergio Perez has avoided a grid penalty at Suzuka
as race stewards took «no further action» after reviewing a suspected block on Lance Stroll in Q1.