
Why F1 Stewards Saw No Need to Investigate Antonelli-Russell Sprint Clashes
F1 stewards at the Canadian Grand Prix briefly reviewed the sprint race clashes between Kimi Antonelli and George Russell but decided no official investigation was needed, concluding the moves were within the rules.
Why it matters:
The decision reinforces the strict criteria for overtaking on the outside in F1, highlighting the risk drivers take when attempting such passes. It also clarifies how stewards interpret a defender's "right to close the line" when the attacker is not clearly ahead and in control.
The details:
- The two incidents occurred on lap 6: Antonelli attempted to pass Russell around the outside at Turn 1, but Russell closed the line, forcing Antonelli off track. Moments later, Antonelli locked up and ran off at Turn 8 while trying another move.
- Antonelli claimed Russell was "naughty" and deserved a penalty, but stewards saw no breach after a quick check prompted by race control.
- Rules: An overtaking car on the outside must have its front axle ahead at the apex, be driven in a controlled manner, and remain within track limits. Antonelli's onboard does not clearly show he was ahead, and his trajectory may not have guaranteed a controlled corner.
- Russell defended his move, comparing it to karting: "There was only one direction I was going and I was going to close the line, because that's my right to do so."
- Antonelli accepted his Turn 8 mistake but still felt Turn 1 needed a second look.
What's next:
The incident is closed, but it sets a benchmark for how similar outside overtaking attempts will be judged. Drivers may think twice about attempting low-percentage passes around the outside when the defender is committed to closing the line.
Original Article :https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/canadian-gp-f1-stewards-antonelli-russell-no-...






