Mercedes withdraw Monaco Grand Prix appeal
BBC News ·

Russell's case was complicated because his fall down the order was precipitated by a cascading series of events. He was given the penalty for pit-lane speeding - by just 0.1km/h - before a safety-car …
Russell's case was complicated because his fall down the order was precipitated by a cascading series of events. He was given the penalty for pit-lane speeding - by just 0.1km/h - before a safety-car period caused by a crash for Aston Martin's Lance Stroll. Russell pitted to change tyres under the safety car but in the confusion, failed to serve the penalty. When the safety car pulled in, Ferrari's Charles Leclerc crashed, which led to the race being suspended under a red flag. During the race stoppage, it was announced that Russell had been given a drive-through penalty for not serving the five-second penalty correctly. He pleaded with officials not to make him serve that penalty when the race resumed and to discuss it afterwards, because the number of penalties suggested something was wrong. They rejected his argument, and when the race restarted, Russell came in again to serve the drive-through penalty, which is what dropped him out of third place. Under F1's rules, Mercedes were able to ask only for a review of the five-second penalty, which they did not actually serve, regardless of whether it was incorrectly awarded. The drive-through penalty was correctly awarded - on the basis he did fail to serve a penalty. Mercedes have looked into the legal complications around this and concluded there is no remedy for that available to them. …
Original source: BBC News
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F1 · George · Ferrari · Russell · Mercedes · Formula 1 · barcelona