Red Bull team boss Christian Horner blamed Carlos Sainz of Ferrari for causing the penultimate lap crash with Sergio Perez that wrecked his team’s hopes of a podium finish in Sunday’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Horner said the Spaniard had drifted across the track towards Perez to cause the collision that wrecked the Mexican’s race and robbed Red Bull of valuable constructors’ championship points.
“It looked to me, just looking at the replay, like Carlos drifts across the circuit to the left-hand side,” said Horner.
Jolyon Palmer on #F1Tv is of the opinion that the incident was predominantly Perez’s fault. They were both fighting for the slipstream, Sainz was considerably ahead and Perez had loads of room on his left.
— amaia ✡︎ (@amaia_end) September 15, 2024
Agreed.#F1 #AzerbaidjanGP pic.twitter.com/fWn8G6jPym
“It’s done a huge amount of damage – a massive accident.
“So, it cost us points, crucial points, for Checo and for the constructors. So very disappointing.”
The pair tangled while battling for third place behind winner Oscar Piastri of McLaren and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.
“He deserved a lot more,” said Horner of Perez who seemed to have recovered his form after a long run in the doldrums during which he scored only 36 points in 10 races as Red Bull lost their dominant position.
Piastri’s victory along with team-mate Lando Norris finishing fourth lifted McLaren 20 points clear of Red Bull at the top of the teams’ championship, ending the champions run of 55 races as leaders.
“He should at the very least have been on the podium today,” added Horner, who suggested a penalty should be in store for Sainz at next weekend’s Singapore Grand Prix.
Sainz and Perez had both declared their own innocence over the shunt and after a stewards’ hearing both driuvers escaped without penalties.
In a statement, the stewards said they deemed “this to be a racing incident with neither driver being predominantly at fault” and said they would take no further action.
The stewards reviewed the incident and studied the driving lines of the drivers on previous laps, noting that Sainz was “on or close to his normal racing line”.
They added that there was nothing unusual about Perez’s racing line, but said 2he could have done more to avoid the car that he had a better view of”.
“I honestly don’t understand what happened,” said Sainz.
“I am 100 per cent convinced I did nothing wrong and did nothing over-aggressive.”
Perez said: “Honestly, it is such a shame. It’s a disaster for the championship and not the way to end a weekend.”
Max Verstappen, who finished fifth, also escaped punishment from the stewards for overtaking cars under the Virtual Safety Car conditions deployed for the final lap after the Sainz-Perez crash.
He was given a formal warning along with Haas’s Nico Hulkenberg and Alpine duo Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon.
Author
World Cup News
-
FIFA World Cup
/ 3 days agoCourtois ‘proud’ as sun sets on Belgium’s ‘Golden Generation’
Thibaut Courtois said he was proud of Belgium's fabled "Golden Generation" on Friday as...
By AFP -
FIFA World Cup
/ 3 days agoSpain vs France a World Cup ‘final before the final’: De la Fuente
Spain coach Luis de la Fuente said on Friday that the World Cup semi-final...
By AFP -
FIFA World Cup
/ 4 days agoMbappe warns ‘a long way to go’ for France at World Cup after reaching semis
France captain Kylian Mbappe insisted Thursday his team were not getting carried away about...
By AFP -
FIFA World Cup
/ 4 days agoDeschamps hails Mbappe after superstar fires France into World Cup semis
France coach Didier Deschamps paid tribute to forward Kylian Mbappe after he scored his...
By AFP