Max Verstappen was slammed as “dangerous” and “ridiculous” for his driving on the Mexico Metropolis Grand Prix after his battle with a fed-up Lando Norris reached boiling level, with McLaren boss Zak Brown insisting “enough is enough”.
Precisely every week after a contentious combat in Austin the place Norris was penalised, Verstappen was handed two 10-second penalties for his actions in wheel-to-wheel fight with the British driver in Mexico and ultimately completed sixth, 4 locations behind his title rival.
“He got what he had coming to him,” mentioned Norris, who has now lower Verstappen’s title result in 47 factors with 4 rounds remaining.
Each of this Sunday’s incidents occurred on Lap 10, as Verstappen first pressured Norris off at Flip 4 – the McLaren crucially forward on the apex earlier than being left no room – after which dived up the within of the high-speed Flip Eight when making an attempt to regain second place, seeing each vehicles off the observe, nearly colliding.
“This guy is dangerous,” Norris complained on crew radio afterwards. “I just had to avoid a crash, the same as last time. I’ll be in the wall in a minute.”
The stewards adjudged Verstappen to be within the unsuitable on each events, handing out two 10-second penalties – as an alternative of the standard 5 seconds for racing incidents – which the Crimson Bull driver served within the pits to basically drop him out of competition.
“[The penalties were] probably not enough,” McLaren CEO Brown advised Sky Sports activities F1.
“I mean, it’s getting a bit ridiculous. I applaud the FIA stewards. Enough is enough. Let’s just have some good clean racing moving forwards.”
Carlos Sainz received the race, with Ferrari leapfrogging Crimson Bull within the constructors’ standings.
The view from Norris and McLaren: ‘Too far’
For McLaren, it was clear they felt Verstappen was lastly adequately punished for what was, in Norris’ phrases, on “another level” to anything he had seen racing the three-time world champion up to now this season.
“The stewards did a good job this weekend,” added Brown, with the stewards set to fulfill with drivers in Qatar to debate racing pointers transferring ahead.
“I think the stewards are on it, I think that’s clear by the penalties that were given.”
Norris mentioned instantly after the race that he “was ready to expect something like this” after the drama of the USA, and continued to Sky Sports activities F1: “I respect Max so much in what he does, how he races, all of these items, and I stay up for having good battles with him.
“I want to have them; it makes me smile and it’s what I love about racing and why I kind of do it in a way. But things like today, it’s a bit too far. We both could be out of the race, and I don’t think that’s how you should race.
“Perhaps some folks will disagree and say I am unsuitable however I feel at this time was a step too far and I feel Max will know that, I hope, and we will then go forward to only have some extra clear, truthful battles as a result of I stay up for them.”
He also explained how Verstappen’s – albeit weaker than pre-Sunday – title position affects his mentality.
“It would not matter if he finishes first or second, he solely desires to beat me. And he’ll sacrifice himself to try this,” he said. “He is in a really highly effective place, he is a great distance forward with nothing to lose.”
The view from Verstappen and Crimson Bull: Penalties ‘harmful territory’
Whereas the often combative – on and off-track – Verstappen was actually stunned on crew radio when advised of his penalties, he did not provide a lot of a defence when requested in regards to the incident post-race.
“The problem is, when you’re slower, you’re being put into those kind of positions. I’m not going to give up easily,” Verstappen advised Sky Sports activities F1, switching the dialog to Crimson Bull’s lack of tempo.
“At the end of the day it’s also not about agreeing or disagreeing with the penalties – the only thing is 20 seconds is quite a lot – but the biggest problem of today and also what I worry about is the race pace. It was really not good and is something we need to analyse. Even without those penalties, we had no chance at all to fight at the front.
“I am not anxious [about the title]. This was a very unhealthy race for us however I additionally know we will do significantly better than this so we’ll simply preserve going at it.”
Crew boss Christian Horner additionally did not get into the specifics of the penalties, however did say such harsh penalties set a “dangerous” precedent transferring forwards.
“The problem is, I think we’re going to get into very dangerous territory of, at what point is a dive bomb going to be OK?
“I feel, actually, the FIA and the drivers want to sit down down and determine what is suitable and what is not. I believed two 10-second [penalties] was a bit on the tough aspect at this time.
“You’ve always got to play to the rules. We’ll look and learn from this race, but more for us today was that we just didn’t have the pace. That’s where our focus will be in the next five days.”
Brundle: ‘Outrageous’ Verstappen ‘well past the restrict’
Sky Sports activities F1’s Martin Brundle on Verstappen vs Norris in Mexico:
“That was outrageous. [The Turn 8 incident] is just a red mist moment, and actually a ridiculous moment. He took the pair of them off, and he was lucky he didn’t get a drive-through penalty or something.
“I am so in awe of Max, and I hate it when he does that form of factor. He is higher than that. He is too good.
“I think he’s carrying frustration because he’s got the third fastest car at the moment. We know he’s feisty, and we know he’s aggressive – and that’s what you want, we’re about that – but there is a limit. That second incident was way past the limit.
“If he retains getting penalties, he’ll must tame it.”
Formula 1’s Americas triple header concludes this weekend with the Sao Paulo Grand Prix, with every session live on Sky Sports F1. Stream each F1 race and extra with a NOW Sports activities Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime