Formula 1 Racing

Why Verstappen blamed Gasly for “dangerous” formation lap near-miss · RaceFans

Lance Stroll, Aston Martin, Interlagos, 2024

Max Verstappen accused Pierre Gasly of causing a “dangerous” situation shortly before the original start of the Brazilian Grand Prix.

The Red Bull driver, who won Sunday’s race, came close to colliding with Franco Colapinto at the exit of turn 14 as the field arrived at the grid at the end of the first formation lap. Verstappen slammed on the brakes but couldn’t avoid passing the Williams and the Haas of Oliver Bearman on its right.

A surprised Verstappen exclaimed: “Woah, woah, woah!” on his radio. “The Alpine was stopped there, mate,” he told race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase.

“Blind corner, stopped around it, so dangerous.” Nico Hulkenberg also passed the pair, and Verstappen, but made no comment on his radio.

The situation occured as the start of the race was plunged into confusion after Lance Stroll spun and came to a stop on the formation lap. The drivers ahead of Verstappen were preparing to take their places on the grid as he caught up on them.

Gasly had qualified 13th on the grid, four places ahead of Verstappen, and one behind Sergio Perez in the other Red Bull. The Alpine driver did not drop back noticeably far from the cars ahead of him during his progress to his starting position. However he did ask his race engineer John Howard to “check everything is okay at the rear because the steering is a bit bent.”

The other drivers around him were not especially slow to line up either. However several of them took up the wrong starting positions, beginning with Verstappen’s team mate.

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Perez was supposed to line up 12th, directly behind Stroll in 10th, though the Aston Martin was stuck in a gravel trap. Red Bull told Perez a car had stopped, but did not point out it was Stroll, and that the grid slot in front of his would therefore be empty. Perez parked his car in Stroll’s 10th place spot and either did not notice he was in the wrong place or chose not to draw attention to it.

Stroll’s missing Aston Martin caused confusion

Lewis Hamilton then parked in Perez’s spot and, shortly afterwards, realised something was wrong. “Am I in the wrong spot?” he asked Peter Bonnington. “I’m missing someone. I think I’m in the wrong spot.”

Next, Colapinto re-passed Verstappen and initially pulled up in his correct spot, leaving a gap in front of him where Hamilton’s car should have been. Then he too pulled forwards, prompting Verstappen to observe “Colapinto…

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