Bottas will start last for Saturday afternoon’s sprint action at the Hard Rock Stadium, actually only two places back from where he qualified after the stewards deemed he had impeded McLaren’s Oscar Piastri during their near-crash in Friday evening sprint qualifying.
The incident happened with four minutes left in SQ1, with Bottas heading into Turn 1 slowly having just completed a flying lap as Piastri approached fast behind having just begun a flier.
Avoiding action from both drivers prevented a crash, with the stewards’ finding that Sauber “had not warned the driver of car 77 that car 81 was approaching on a fast lap” and that was “obviously an error on the team’s part and contributed significantly to the incident”.
The stewards nevertheless handed out the grid drop sanction as Article 33.4 of F1’s sporting rules states “the primary responsibility rests with the driver to ensure that he does not place himself in a position whereby he unnecessarily impedes another driver”.
“Here, car 77 was driving slowly on the racing line and caused the situation that ensued”, the bulletin added.
The incident is notable because Bottas has a new race engineer for this weekend after what the Finn called “quite a sudden change” made by Sauber between this event and the Chinese GP.
Mercedes investigation may lead to rule change
In the other post-sprint race investigation, the stewards opted to take no action against Mercedes for its mechanics not wearing helmets when front wing angle adjustments were being made to Lewis Hamilton’s’ car during the closing minutes of SQ2.
Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes W15
Photo by: Erik Junius
This is a breach of Article 34.13’s sporting rules that states “all team personnel carrying out any work on a car in the pitlane when the car is in its pitstop position… must be wearing helmets.”
The rule also states that “the use of appropriate eye protection is compulsory”.
But the stewards opted not to sanction Mercedes because “as we were examining the conduct of the team in relation to this infringement, it came to our attention that a number of other teams had engaged in similar work without helmets and/or without eye protection during the session either within the pit stop position or in close proximity to it”.
The bulletin continued: “Certainly, those that were working on the car within the pitstop positions would also have been in breach of Article 34.13 (for example by touching the car or…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Autosport.com – Formula 1 – Stories…