
Piastri Warns of 'Tricky Precedent' After Gasly's Reinstated Monaco Podium
Oscar Piastri has warned that Alpine's successful appeal of Pierre Gasly's Monaco Grand Prix penalties risks setting a "tricky precedent" in Formula 1, where teams might refuse to serve penalties during races and instead litigate them for weeks. The McLaren driver's comments reflect growing tension over the Right of Review process, which reinstated Gasly to the podium after proving the pit lane distance was inaccurately measured.
Why it matters:
The dispute strikes at how sporting penalties are enforced in real time. If teams can overturn penalties through post-race challenges rather than accepting them immediately, it could alter race strategy and undermine the finality of results. With McLaren and Red Bull filing appeals to the FIA International Court of Appeal, the Monaco classification remains unofficial weeks later, leaving the field in limbo.
The details:
- Alpine chose not to have Gasly serve two five-second penalties during the Monaco race, instead accepting post-race time additions while preparing a Right of Review challenge.
- The team presented new Formula One Management data showing the pit lane distance used to calculate speeds was inaccurate, causing the timing system to overstate speeds. The stewards rescinded both penalties.
- Piastri, who served his own pit lane speeding penalty during the race, noted that accepting penalties immediately is standard practice and shaped his strategy. He ultimately lost a position when Gasly was reinstated.
- Gasly maintains the review simply corrected an FIA error, though he understands rival frustrations.
What's next:
The pending McLaren and Red Bull appeals mean Gasly's podium is not yet officially secure, with a ruling from the International Court of Appeal still to come. Piastri hopes F1 learns to ensure pit lane measurements are accurate, but stressed the sport must avoid encouraging teams to gamble on post-race appeals instead of serving penalties during the race.
Original Article :https://racingnews365.com/oscar-piastri-wary-of-tricky-precedent-in-risk-to-f1-r...





