Red
Bull boss wants F1 engine allocation increased
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[September 05, 2017]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Red Bull boss
Christian Horner has called for Formula One drivers to be allowed
more engines per season to reduce the rash of starting grid
penalties that reached farcical levels at the weekend.
Mercedes's championship leader Lewis Hamilton, who took a record
69th pole position at the Italian Grand Prix, was the only driver at
Monza on Sunday to start from where he had actually qualified.
Behind him, nine of the 20 drivers took penalties for engine and
gearbox changes.
Drivers are allowed four power units, divided into six component
parts, per season before penalties are incurred. Next year's
allocation will be reduced to three while the calendar expands from
20 to 21 rounds.
"For me that should be number one on the agenda for the next
strategy meeting," Horner told reporters.
"I tried to get it changed at an earlier meeting in the year but
there was no support for it. I would hope that would now perhaps be
different with teams incurring and staring down the barrel of
further penalties between now and the end of the year."
The engine restrictions were introduced as a cost-saving measure,
and to reinforce the sport's energy-efficient credentials, but
Horner said that objective was not being achieved.
"It's not saving the cost because the engines are going on a world
tour anyway, they're being used and you're just incurring penalties
as a result. Perhaps we need to get back to a more equitable
balance," he said.
"Maybe five engines is the right number rather than four going to
three."
Some, including Formula One's managing director for motorsport Ross
Brawn, have suggested changing the penalty system.
"I hate the fact that we're having to affect the racing because of
the technical issues," Brawn said ahead of Monza.
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Red Bull Team Principal Christian Horner before the race
REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff
But others operating on tight budgets, such as Force
India, are against easing the restrictions.
"In the old days, before we had a set number of engines per driver,
you could use one engine per race and that cost a lot of money,"
said Force India's chief operating officer Otmar Szafnauer.
The spate of penalties puzzled even paddock insiders at Monza.
Horner was one of them, with Red Bull's Max Verstappen and Daniel
Ricciardo qualifying second and third fastest but collecting 20 and
25 place grid drops respectively before starting 13th and 16th.
Ricciardo finished fourth in the race, with Verstappen 10th. Without
the penalties at least one could have expected to be on the podium.
"Even going to the grid we were trying to work out whether we were
going to be 12th or 13th because (Force India's Sergio) Perez had
picked up a penalty but he'd picked it up before or after somebody.
It's too confusing," said Horner.
"I think it needs a serious look at to see whether there's a better
way of penalizing a manufacturer... as opposed to messing around
with the grid.
"I think it will only get worse. It would be a shame to see this
championship decided on grid penalties."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Sudipto Ganguly) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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