Max Verstappen denies he was “aggressive” towards Lando Norris in their 2024 Formula 1 Austrian Grand Prix crash and that he was moving under braking throughout their battle.
The pair collided as the final laps of the main event at the Red Bull Ring kicked off, with Verstappen penalised for moving across on Norris’s outside line attack at the track’s tight, sharply-uphill Turn 3 right-hander.
Verstappen was given a 10-second penalty as the stewards found him to be predominantly to blame for the collision, which opened the door for George Russell to win as both drivers incurred punctures, dropping Verstappen off the podium and Norris into retirement.
When asked about the contact by reporters after the race, Verstappen said he “went back at it” and feels “10 seconds seemed a bit severe for me at that point”.
He added: “Because I didn’t feel like it was super – like anything kind of aggressive – going on in that movement.”
Of the two previous moments where Norris and then Verstappen went off the track as the McLaren attacked at Turn 3’s inside, which the former felt featured the latter moving under braking and against F1’s racing rules, Verstappen said: “For me, it was not moving under braking.
“Because every time that I moved, I was not braking already. Of course from the outside it always looks like that, but I think I know fairly well what to do in these kind of scenarios.
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing
Photo by: Mark Sutton
“Also a few of those are really late dive bombs [from Norris], so it’s a bit of just sending it up the inside and just hope that the other guy steers out of it.
“It’s not always how you race, but I think it’s just the corner here that lends to that as well.
“I’ve been in the other position as well where you go for it, and it’s just the shape of the corner.
“I think the move that we got together was something that I didn’t expect.
“I saw him coming of course, so I defended a little bit the inside. And then under braking we touched with the rear tyres and we both get a puncture from it, which of course is something you don’t want to happen.”
In further questioning on the penalty being applied to his case, Verstappen again highlighted his rival’s attacking actions.
“That’s what I meant with the dive bombing,” he said.
“It’s just standing it up late and just hoping that the other guy steers out of it and you make the corner, which wasn’t the…
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