Yuki Tsunoda says he does not trust the “super inconsistent” FIA after closing in on a grid penalty when he was slapped with a fourth reprimand in Monaco for reasons he doesn’t “know why”.
Tsunoda is walking the line for a 10-place grid penalty after he was deemed to have impeded Haas driver Kevin Magnussen in Friday practice in Monte Carlo.
The stewards declared that while “it is not common to impose penalties for impeding during free practice sessions”, Tsunoda’s incident was “sufficiently serious to warrant” a penalty.
The AlphaTauri driver said at the time that he was baffled by the decision.
“I tried to push at the chicane and let him by at Turn 11,” he said. “In the end, he went straight again. My perspective, this is the only place to go [past]. It’s hard to let him by.”
On a weekend in which Ferrari also criticised the FIA after they were slapped with a monetary fine when Carlos Sainz impeded Lance Stroll, Max Verstappen escaped a penalty when he toyed with the pit lane exit line during the grand prix.
In that instance the FIA declared that the race director’s notes differed to the rule and therefore he could not be sanctioned.
The FIA took steps to clear that up ahead of this weekend’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix with Tsunoda asked for his thoughts on that.
He instead gave his thoughts on the FIA’s decision making as a whole.
“I’m not trusting the FIA,” said the Japanese driver. “Every time it’s super inconsistent.
“I got already four reprimands, and the last time in Monaco, I still don’t know why.
“I mean, it’s not good to say what other drivers were doing, but other drivers were doing even worse things and they don’t have any investigation, whereas other races they [the FIA] were suddenly getting strict or something like that.
“So probably if someone cross the white line there would be a penalty for some races.
“For me, I’ll just stick to what the regulation [says] or just the safest as much as…
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