Pierre Gasly was at fault for clashing with Alonso on the first corner

The Istanbul stewards explain why Pierre Gasly was handed a time penalty for his first corner clash with Fernando Alonso. Heading into Turn 1 left-hander at the start of Sunday’s Turkish Grand Prix, Sergio Perez was on the inside, with Pierre Gasly to his right and Fernando Alonso on the outside. As they jostled for position, the AlphaTauri clipped the Alpine sending it into a spin and thereby dropping Alonso from 5th to 16th. “I was sandwiched,” Gasly immediately told his team. Usually, in the mad scramble for position at the start of a race, particularly in such conditions, such a clash would be viewed as a ‘racing incident’, but in this case the stewards felt Gasly was “predominantly” to blame. “Gasly tried to negotiate Turn 1 with Perez on the inside and Alonso on the outside,” they explained. Alonso was slightly in front of Gasly at the exit of the corner when both cars made contact, causing the Spaniard to spin. “The Stewards determine that Gasly was predominantly at fault for the collision, as he did not leave enough space for Alonso on the outside. “It should also be pointed out that the Stewards do not consider this incident as an unavoidable Lap 1 Turn 1 contact between two cars,” they added, “as Gasly was not sandwiched between two cars when he touched Alonso’s car.” “If we go back to the start of the year, if you recall, pre the first event was that following discussions with the drivers and the teams we had to sort of ratchet back a little bit, the let them race principles in general,” race director, Michael Masi subsequently explained. “And one of them was first-lap incidents, and that if a driver was wholly to blame for an incident, then it would likely result in a penalty. “And that one there was the stewards determined that Pierre was wholly to blame for the incident. And as a result, a five-second penalty was imposed.” Asked how that compared to the first lap clash at Imola involving Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen, Masi said: “If you look at the Max and Lewis one, it’s one of those, the wholly or predominantly, under our regulations. “So we’ve said, and the way that for ease of interpretation, let’s call it, for everyone’s benefit, is that if someone is wholly to blame on lap one, it will result in a penalty. “If it takes two to tango, then it would be likely on lap one not result in anything, or if there’s more than the two cars involved. But if it’s quite clear, two cars, one has done it, then a penalty would happen.” Asked if Perez has played a part in Sunday’s incident, Masi said: “That was one of the things why it probably took a little bit longer at the start to have a closer look at, is that obviously Sergio was on the inside, but once it was quite clear from all of the footage and everything available, that’s why they determined that it was a five second penalty.” “There was contact and I haven’t really seen the footage” said Gasly. “For me it was tight with Sergio inside me and Fernando was on the outside, so honestly there wasn’t space, but yes there was contact. “I did the penalty,” he added, “I don’t know if it was the right thing or not. I need to look at the footage first. “I saw Fernando was there, I also saw Sergio was there, and I tried to go where I could. We know it is always usually not a good mix when there are that many cars. I don’t have any other similar situation that comes to mind. That is just the way it is.” Ironically, Alonso subsequently picked up his own penalty for clashing with Mick Schumacher. “Alonso tried to make a move on Schumacher at the inside at the approach to Turn 4, but never got in a position to complete the move and made contact with the inside rear wheel of the Haas, causing it to spin,” said the stewards, who deemed that Alonso – like Gasly moments earlier – was “predominantly to blame”. The Spaniard was also handed 2 penalty points, his first since his return to the sport.

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Mercedes believes Hamilton would have gotten a better result if he pitted earlier

Mercedes believe that they needed to pit Lewis Hamilton earlier than they did in order for him to finish higher than fifth in the Turkish Grand Prix. Hamilton ran as high as third at one point in the race after deciding not to fit a fresh set of intermediate tyres at the same time as Max Verstappen and his other rivals ahead. The team called him in at one stage, but he decided to stay out.Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff said the team had to decide between coming in at that point or risking a run to the end of the race without pitting. They opted for the latter, but abandoned the strategy after they became concerned how much time Hamilton was losing to the cars behind him. “In the car it’s always very difficult to assess your position in the race,” said Wolff. “I think we could have either played it very conservative and pitted him when Verstappen, Perez at the time pitted, and then fight it out on-track, probably come out behind Perez and fight for P4, P3 on track.” “The other thing was to try to go long and either think whether it’s transitioning to a dry tyre or just not stopping any more. So there was two possible options that sounded quite good.” However Hamilton’s tyres began to fade, putting him at risk of losing a place to Pierre Gasly if he pitted, leading Mercedes to bring him in with eight laps to go. “Unfortunately the pace just dropped off much quicker than we would have needed in order to stay third or even fourth or even fifth,” said Wolff. “We almost lost the window against Gasly and then we decided okay, that’s not going to happen, and let’s pit and consolidate it.” “So in hindsight now, I would have pitted ten laps earlier and fought it out on track, probably finished third or fourth. It was much more to gain from the other more dynamic variant.” While Mercedes won the race with Valtteri Bottas Hamilton finished fifth. Wolff said that was the best they could have expected from 11th on the grid in a dry race, but the damp conditions meant a better result was possible. “I think in a normal dry race, this would have probably been the best case, finishing fifth. And today best case with every decision, with the hindsight of the end result or with the information we have at the end, probably third would have been the best we could have achieved. So it’s a five point swing. “But I think we need to walk away from here and say that was damage limitation for this weekend. And Valtteri, thank God Valtteri was up there and won the race and and scored an extra point for fastest lap.”

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Bottas wins wet Turkish GP as Verstappen takes championship lead

Valtteri Bottas won the Turkish Grand Prix, ending a year-long winless drought after leading most of the race from pole position. Max Verstappen finished second to take a six point lead in the championship, ahead of Lewis Hamilton, who finished fifth following a late pit stop.Rainfall earlier in the morning soaked the course with water, and light showers persisted throughout the day. All twenty cars started the race on the intermediate tyres. To their credit, it was a mostly clean opening lap – though not entirely without incident. Pierre Gasly picked up a five second time penalty for avoidable contact with Fernando Alonso at the first corner. Alonso, who dropped to the back of the field after a spin, then picked up a five second penalty of his own when he hit Mick Schumacher and spun the Haas driver out. All of the leaders were content to run their single set of intermediates, potentially as long as to the end of the race. That changed on lap 37, when Verstappen made a stop to switch to a new set of intermediates. Bottas pitted from the lead on the next lap. Aston Martin even felt confident enough to send Sebastian Vettel out on a set of medium compound slick tyres, but the track was still far too wet for the gamble to pay off at all. Charles Leclerc took the lead after Bottas’ pit stop. Leclerc, Lewis Hamilton, and Esteban Ocon were the last of the front runners running on their first set of tyres. At the front, Leclerc began to haemorrhage time to Bottas on his worn set of intermediates, setting Bottas up for a chance to re-take the lead with a lunge up the inside of turn one on lap 47. Leclerc finally pitted at the end of the lap, and much to the seven-time world champion’s reluctance, Hamilton made his stop on lap 51. Hamilton continued to protest the decision to pit with eight laps to go. He dropped into fifth place behind Leclerc, with Gasly gaining on him in sixth. Hamilton could not make any forward progress as he suffered with graining in his new set of intermediates. Bottas, at the front, stretched his lead out to over ten seconds – and after spinning off five times in last year’s Turkish Grand Prix, he drove to a commanding first win of the 2021 season by 14.5 seconds; Verstappen finished second to take the championship lead, and the second Red Bull of Sergio Perez finished in third, for his first podium since the French Grand Prix. Leclerc held on to fourth, ahead of Hamilton in fifth, Gasly sixth, and Lando Norris in seventh. Carlos Sainz Jnr was voted Driver of the Day are completing his drive from 19th on the grid after a pre-event power unit change, up into eighth place. Lance Stroll finished ninth and Esteban Ocon, the only driver to run the full distance without stopping, held off Antonio Giovinazzi for the final point in tenth. 2021 F1 TURKISH GRAND PRIX – RESULTS POS DRIVER NAT. TEAM TIME 1 Valtteri Bottas FIN Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team 58 Laps 2 Max Verstappen NED Red Bull Racing + 14.584s 3 Sergio Perez MEX Red Bull Racing + 33.471s 4 Charles Leclerc MON Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow + 37.471s 5 Lewis Hamilton GBR Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team + 41.812s 6 Pierre Gasly FRA Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda + 44.292s 7 Lando Norris GBR McLaren F1 Team + 47.213s 8 Carlos Sainz ESP Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow + 51.526s 9 Lance Stroll CAN Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team + 82.018s 10 Esteban Ocon FRA Alpine F1 Team + 1 Lap 11 Antonio Giovinazzi ITA Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen + 1 Lap  12 Kimi Raikkonen FIN Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen + 1 Lap 13 Daniel Ricciardo AUS McLaren F1 Team + 1 Lap 14 Yuki Tsunoda JPN Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda + 1 Lap 15 George Russell GBR Williams Racing + 1 Lap 16 Fernando Alonso ESP Alpine F1 Team + 1 Lap 17 Nicholas Latifi CAN Williams Racing + 1 Lap 18 Sebastian Vettel GER Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team + 1 Lap 19 Mick Schumacher GER Uralkali Haas F1 Team + 2 Laps 20 Nikita Mazepin RUS Uralkali Haas F1 Team + 2 Laps

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Mercedes explain why Hamilton has only taken a ten-place grid penalty at the Turkish GP

Lewis Hamilton will take a 10-place grid penalty for Sunday’s Turkish Grand Prix, after Mercedes fitted his W12 out with a fresh Internal Combustion Engine. Unlike the majority of engine changes, Mercedes didn’t introduce new ancillaries such as the MGU-H, MGU-K or Turbocharger, and the simple replacement of the ICE element of the power unit means that Hamilton only takes a 10-place grid drop, rather than starting from the very back. Speaking after the first practice session in Turkey, Mercedes’ Head of Trackside Engineering, Andrew Shovlin, explained why the team had made that call and why the decision was made for the Istanbul weekend. “We’re simulating all the races to the end of the year and there’s a balance of the risk of a reliability issue,” Shovlin told Sky Sports F1. “Obviously, the thing that you definitely don’t want to do is fail during a race, and then have to take a penalty anyway. “Then there’s also a performance element because the power units do lose a bit of horsepower over their life. “Now, the 10-place penalty is the bit that most contributes to that reliability element, and the performance is the ICE itself. It’s better to take 10 places than start from the back.” However qualifying goes, Shovlin said that it’s very unlikely Mercedes will change any additional power unit parts this weekend. “Unlikely, really, [because] it’s a lot of fairly intrusive work when you start changing some of those elements during the race weekend,” he explained. “So we’re pretty happy with the decision that we’ve taken so far, and they’ll be likely what we’ll stick with.” Istanbul Park is, in theory, one of the easier venues left on the calendar for overtaking, meaning that Hamilton shouldn’t find it too hard to exploit Mercedes’ outright pace. Shovlin said the extra challenge for this weekend adds a fresh layer of excitement. “Working out how easy it is to overtake, it’s actually quite hard, because you know in your own mind which are the tracks that are good for passing,” he commented. “Sochi has got very long straights but we were struggling a bit with understeer and that made it tricky. “This is a circuit, you remember Lewis and that GP2 race, where he felt there’s a lot of opportunity here, and it should make for an exciting Sunday!” Having topped the times in FP1, Shovlin was asked whether the team might be kicking themselves after qualifying if it turns out that Hamilton has a big pace advantage over title rival Max Verstappen. “That’s the thing, isn’t it? It’s a double-edged sword,” he said. “It does make it easier to recover. Could it be a race that Lewis could have won from pole? Obviously, that balance is one of the things, but it is what it is, so we just need to make the most of getting back and hopefully even have an opportunity to win.”

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Hamilton handed a 10-place grid penalty after Internal Combustion Engine change

Formula 1 driver Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes received a 10-place grid penalty on Friday over an Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) change for the upcoming Turkish Grand Prix. “His Mercedes W12 has been fitted with a new internal combustion engine (ICE) and exhaust but the driver has only exceeded his allocation of new ICEs,” the F1 said in a statement. “Because he has exceeded his allocation of new engines, he’s set to receive a 10-place penalty however, Hamilton came from sixth to win the 2020 Turkish GP,” it added. The season’s 16th race will take place over 58 laps of the 5.4-kilometer (3.4 miles) Intercity Istanbul Park on Sunday, Oct. 10. Hamilton currently holds the top spot in the driver standings with 246.5 points, while Red Bull’s Dutch driver Max Verstappen ranks second with 244.5 points.​​​​​​​

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Lewis Hamilton tops Turkish GP FP1

Lewis Hamilton led the field in the first practice session for the Turkish Grand Prix, the Mercedes driver edging Red Bull’s Max Verstappen by a comfortable margin of 0.425s. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc concluded his morning in third position, very close to the Dutchman while Valtteri Bottas and Carlos Sainz completed the top five in the incident-free session. Local weather forecasts are predicting a wet weekend, but the opening practice session kicked off under a cloudy but sunny sky, and 20°C air temperatures. To help cope with Istanbul Park’s water-blasted higher grip surface, Pirelli is supplying its softest three compounds. The novelty at the outset on Friday was Red Bull’s revamped RB16B livery that pays tribute to its engine partner Honda that will depart F1 at the end of the season. With the usual installation laps and rake experiences out of the way, Hamilton was quick to charge to the top, but the Briton was overhauled in short order by Verstappen. But Alpine’s Esteban Ocon briefly settled the matter between the two title contenders by leap-frogging both, with McLaren’s Lando Norris following right behind. However, Hamilton pumped in a lap in the 1m24s on the soft tyre to reassert his authority over the young guns. As the session unfolded, the 100-time Grand Prix winner continued to lower the benchmark, with Verstappen in tow, 0.425s behind. The soft rubber was the tyre of choice for the entire field during the session. Behind the two inseparable front-runners, Leclerc attempted a flyer on the red-walled compound that nearly allowed the Scuderia charger to pip Verstappen for second. In the end however, the Monegasque’s best effort came up just 0.051s short. Behind the leading trio, Bottas worked diligently to conclude his morning fourth, just edging the second Ferrari of Sainz. Thereafter followed Ocon, the faster of the two Alpine drivers, Norris, AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, Fernando Alonso and Sergio Perez who rounded off the top ten, a fair distance once again from his Red Bull teammate. The second half of the field lined up also enjoyed an incident-free session, with Williams’ George Russell clocking in P11, ahead of Daniel Ricciardo. Bringing up the rear, Mick Schumacher comfortably edged his Haas teammate Nikita Mazepin.

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F1 Medical Car team replaced ahead of Turkish GP after testing positive for COVID-19

F1 Medical Car team has been changed prior to this weekend’s Turkish Grand Prix after testing positive for COVID-19, FIA has confirmed. Alan Van der Merwe who is the medical car driver and Dr Ian Roberts, the F1 medical rescue co-ordinator and deputy medical delegate tested positive for COVID-19 before travelling to Turkey according to FIA. They will be under self-isolation and will not be participating in the Turkish Grand Prix this weekend at Istanbul park. The duo will be replaced by Formula E Safety Car driver Bruno Correia who will be driving the F1 Safety Car this weekend and Formula E medical delegate Dr Bruno Franceschini who will replace Dr Ian Roberts. 43-year-old Bruno Correia has been driving the Formula E safety car since the series started in 2014, driving the BMW i8 and later the Mini Electric Pacesetter which replaced it this year. Before that, Correia was the Safety Car driver for the World Touring Car Championship and European Touring Car Cup. He has competed in the Portuguese Formula Ford series and Spanish Formula Renault during his racing career Bernd Maylander will continue to drive the Safety Car as usual at the Turkish Grand Prix.

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Red Bull reveals special white livery ahead of Turkish GP inspired by Honda

Red Bull has revealed a special white livery that it will be using this weekend at The Turkish Grand Prix. The RB16B is bearing white and red theme colours acting as a tribute to power unit partner Honda who will be leaving Formula 1 at the end of the year. In 1965 Honda made its maiden win with the Honda RA272 whose livery has a striking resemblance to the special white livery on the RB16B. Red Bull decided to run the livery this weekend at Istanbul park since the Japanese Grand Prix was set for this weekend before the F1 calendar was rescheduled after Japan imposed travel restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Red Bull will rebrand their new power units under Red Bull Powertrains after Honda leaves officially at the end of the year. Red Bull Powertrains will supply Both Red Bull and its junior team AlphaTauri with power units for the next three years.

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Title fight is taking a toll on Mercedes – Marko

Red Bull’s advisor Dr Helmut Marko claims Mercedes is suffering from engine problems as a direct result of the fight for the 2021 championship title with Red Bull. There are reports that Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton will be starting the Turkish GP at the back of the grid this weekend because of an unscheduled engine change. However, according to reliable resources from a Mercedes insider, the engine change for Hamilton this weekend at Istanbul will not be happening. It is likely to happen during United States or Mexican Grand Prix. “It probably won’t happen in Turkey unless Lewis has a problem there, we expect a close race against Red Bull,” the source said. “But then it (the engine change) has to be done. We’re trying to do it on a track where we are either particularly strong or weak or when it rains.” “Mexico will be a Red Bull circuit because of the altitude, and maybe also Interlagos.” According to Marko, Mercedes has been plagued by the engine issues as a result of the close and intense battle for the championship with Red Bull. “Mercedes used to have an easy time,” the 78-year-old said. “They accelerated in the first few laps and then turned the engines down. That is no longer possible.” “Now they have to drive more often and for longer in a higher mode. And then the problems come,” he added. Through Red Bull sources, Mercedes’ engine problem comes from the crankshaft and the valve seats which affect the horsepower when the engine mileage continues counting. Mercedes boss Toto Wolf said there is a high possibility that Hamilton’s engine will be changed. “It’s small things but unfortunately they’re always different. There is no clearly recognisable pattern.”

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