McLaren team principal Andrea Stella says his team asked the FIA for an explanation for the yellow flag that ruined Lando Norris’ qualifying session.
Norris was eliminated from Q1 in 17th place in Baku after being forced to abandon his final lap having caught the slow-moving Alpine of Esteban Ocon at the exit of turn 16.
Entering the final four minutes of Q1, Norris say in eighth position with a 1’43.609, just ahead of team mate Oscar Piastri in the times. Norris left the pit lane with over two minutes remaining, directly behind his team mate.
As Norris prepared himself on his out lap through the middle sector, Ocon was one of several drivers pushing in the first sector. At the exit of turn four, Ocon hit the outside wall with his left-rear wheel, puncturing the tyre. He almost crashed into the wall at turn six moments later, but was told to “try and keep going if we can, Esteban” by race engineer Josh Peckett.
At around the same time, Norris was beginning his final push lap. He was warned by race engineer Will Joseph to be “mindful of debris between turn six and turn seven – not sure where”. The yellow flag was initially shown as Ocon slowed before turn seven, but he was covered by a white flag through the majority of the lap as the Alpine recovered to the pits.
Norris had now completed the opening two sectors of the lap and was eight tenths of a second up on his previous best time and just over a second quicker than what would eventually turn out to be the cut off time for Q2, set by Fernando Alonso in 15th.
But as Norris rounded turn 16, he ran wide onto the outside kerb. It wasn’t immediately clear whether he had gone beyond the track limits, which would lead to his lap time being deleted.
Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and
At the same time, the FIA timing system indicated a single yellow flag due to Ocon’s slow-moving car at track sector 18 – the exact section of the circuit Norris was travelling through. Although Ocon was off the racing line on the way towards turn 18, he appeared to slow almost to a stop in an effort to give Norris enough chance to pass him into the fast kinks of turns 18 and 19.
As Norris rounded turn 17, a LED marshals board at turn 18 appeared to be flashing green, but may have appeared yellow from a distance in the evening light. However, Norris could have reasonably assumed that the green flag ahead meant he was in a yellow flag zone as he passed the slow Alpine. He backed off before…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at RaceFans…