
Mercedes Pursues Legal Remedy for Russell Following Gasly Penalty Reversal
Mercedes is exploring legal avenues to rectify George Russell's disastrous Monaco Grand Prix after the FIA admitted to a measurement discrepancy in pit lane speed calculations. The move comes after Alpine successfully overturned two five-second penalties against Pierre Gasly, restoring the Frenchman to a podium finish.
Why it matters:
For George Russell, the difference between a potential top-five finish and a 12th-place result has significant implications for his 2026 championship standings. If the FIA's timing equipment was flawed for Gasly, the same error likely affected Russell, making the drive-through penalty that ruined his race fundamentally unfair.
The Details:
- The Gasly Precedent: Pierre Gasly had two five-second penalties added to his time post-race. Upon a 'right of review,' the FIA rescinded them due to sensor errors, moving him back to P3.
- The Russell Complication: Unlike Gasly, Russell was handed a five-second penalty during the race. A failure by the Mercedes pit crew to serve the penalty correctly led to a drive-through penalty, dropping him out of the points entirely.
- Legal Hurdles: Because Russell's penalty was served in real-time rather than added to the final race time, reversing the result is procedurally complex. Toto Wolff acknowledges that a drive-through is roughly equivalent to a 20-second time loss.
- Grid Reaction: Red Bull and McLaren have already lodged notices of intention to appeal Gasly's reinstated podium, further complicating the race's final classification.
The Big Picture:
This situation exposes a critical failure in the FIA's officiating technology. While Gasly's case was a straightforward time adjustment, Russell's case involves a sequence of events—a penalty followed by a team error—that cannot be easily "undone" on a leaderboard. Mercedes is not challenging Gasly's result but is seeking a specific remedy for the points Russell lost due to a faulty system.
What's next:
Toto Wolff has confirmed that the team is working with legal counsel to find any "millimetre of chance" to restore Russell's position. While Wolff admits a full reversal of the result is unlikely, the team will push for a correction if a legal loophole exists to compensate for the sensor discrepancy.
Original Article :https://speedcafe.com/f1-news-2026-barcelona-catalunya-spain-toto-wolff-appeal-l...





