The pair made contact when Ricciardo made a move on the inside of a tight right-hander as they battled for 11th position on the 51st lap.
Tsunoda driver made it back to the pits, but he was forced to retire due to damage incurred.
Ricciardo was soon handed a 10-second penalty by the FIA stewards. However, his recovery was helped by him being one of the few drivers to switch to soft tyres for the last part of the race.
Against the odds, he moved up to seventh place by the flag and was far enough ahead of Esteban Ocon that the effect of the penalty was negated.
Ricciardo said he wouldn’t take full blame for the earlier incident, suggesting that Tsunoda could have left him more room.
“I’ve seen a few replays,” he said. “I mean, I’ll take more of the responsibility, but certainly I don’t feel it was 100 to zero in terms of my fault. I didn’t lock, I stayed on the apex, truth is I didn’t actually plan or want to overtake him there.
“I mean, of course I’d love to overtake him, I wasn’t set into that corner to like outbrake him and overtake him. I just thought if I stay there… It’s nothing that you probably don’t know, but all the grip’s on the inside of that corner. It’s very dusty.
“So I thought if I could just stay there, keep him a bit on the dirty line, I’ll get a better exit. Look, we probably needed to give each other 20-30 more centimetres and we’re fine. Probably not even that.
“I wish it didn’t happen, and I’m sorry that it happened, but I think 10 seconds was more than enough, and somehow we kind of still came through.”
Ricciardo admitted that he expected a penalty.
“Yeah, I figured they probably had to do something. But I also it’s so hard when you’re in the heat of battle, but I didn’t remember locking. With Carlos [Sainz] in Imola Turn 1, when I went off the apex and slid into him. It didn’t feel like that.
Daniel Ricciardo, McLaren MCL36
Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images
“So I was going to come on the radio and vent a little, but I just chose to say nothing. I went pretty dark, and then just decided to keep pushing and try to make up for it.”
Ricciardo said he felt really comfortable once he was on the soft tyre.
“At that point, I didn’t really care,” he said. “Because I didn’t have that much to lose, and as soon as I got out the pits the tyre was like so much better. I could lean on it, and I felt like I was in control.
“So I was like, let’s just use this tyre, see what it’s got. And then it stayed relatively…
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