F1 stewards make George Russell penalty decision hours after Japanese GP

1090     0
George Russell was investigated by the Japanese GP stewards (Image: AFP via Getty Images)
George Russell was investigated by the Japanese GP stewards (Image: AFP via Getty Images)

George Russell has avoided punishment for forcing Oscar Piastri off track late in the Japanese Grand Prix.

The Briton attempted a bold overtake heading into the final chicane with a few laps left to go. But he ended up leaving little room for the McLaren and so Piastri had to take the run-off to avoid a collision.

He stayed in front as a result, but Russell got the overtake done shortly afterwards anyway to finish seventh on the road. However, the stewards investigated that move to see if the Mercedes driver had been too aggressive in his first attempt.

After studying the footage and hearing both sides of the story, they decided a penalty for Russell was not necessary. No further action was taken against the Briton and his finishing position is secure.

The stewards said the circumstances of the incident meant it was "challenging" to arrive at a final decision. They eventually decided that Russell did not "dive in" to the corner and felt he had "left sufficient room" for Piastri who decided instead to take the safer option and use the run-off area.

Inside the driver call which upset Red Bull and changed the course of F1 history eiqehiqreidtprwInside the driver call which upset Red Bull and changed the course of F1 history

The report also revealed that "both drivers and team representatives agreed this incident did not warrant the imposition of any penalty".

Speaking after the race, Russell said: "We moved forward today and that was positive. The plan to start on the hard tyre after the red flag was to give us the flexibility to attempt either a one-stop or a two-stop.

"It was good to have this freedom and, ultimately, we ended up on the two-stop strategy as the one stop wasn't working. We had a challenging opening stint but after that first stop, our pace looked competitive to those ahead.

"It was an exciting race towards the end. It's always nice to be attacking rather than defending, and it was good, hard racing. There was some contact with Oscar, which was a racing incident, but I was glad to get the position in the end.

"It's close between the four teams behind Red Bull and qualifying is going to be critical at each race. Whoever starts ahead will likely finish at the front of that pack. We know we've got work to do and we will keep pushing. Hopefully a track like the one in China will suit us better."

Daniel Moxon

McLaren F1, Oscar Piastri, George Russell, Mercedes F1, Japanese Grand Prix, Formula 1

Read more similar news:

01.01.2023, 12:00 • Sport
David Coulthard fires warning at Red Bull and Mercedes over Ferrari 2023 chances
02.01.2023, 17:43 • Sport
Toto Wolff promises "very different" Mercedes car will be "full of surprises"
02.01.2023, 20:32 • Sport
Audi F1 chief addresses Mick Schumacher rumours as driver search begins
03.01.2023, 08:00 • Sport
Christian Horner issues Red Bull war cry as FIA's F1 cost cap sanctions kick in
03.01.2023, 13:12 • Sport
Mick Schumacher's emotional tribute to father Michael on F1 icon's 54th birthday
03.01.2023, 16:37 • Investigation
Michael Schumacher now - paralysis, pioneering surgery and 'new life in Spain'
03.01.2023, 17:53 • Sport
Sebastian Vettel has perfect F1 opportunity after pal Mick Schumacher's decision
03.01.2023, 19:44 • Sport
Four F1 teams rejected Nyck de Vries as rookie looks to prove them wrong in 2023
03.01.2023, 20:37 • Sport
Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen warned to prepare for "longer fight" this year
04.01.2023, 11:15 • Sport
F1 chief plans for sport to expand to more than 10 teams in radical shake-up