Mercedes drop F1 appeal and congratulate Verstappen
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[December 16, 2021] By
Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Lewis Hamilton's Mercedes team dropped plans to
appeal the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix outcome on Thursday and
congratulated Max Verstappen as Formula One world champion.
Red Bull's Verstappen, 24, seized the title after overtaking
seven-times world champion Hamilton on the last lap of the race amid
uproar over how a late safety car period was conducted.
The Dutch driver is due to collect his trophy at a gala awards
ceremony in Paris on Thursday evening.
Mercedes welcomed the governing FIA's decision, announced on
Wednesday, to analyse what happened at Yas Marina and bring clarity
for the future.
"We will hold the FIA accountable for this process and we hereby
withdraw our appeal," the team said.
Mercedes had announced their intention to appeal after two post-race
protests were dismissed. The deadline was Thursday evening.
"We left Abu Dhabi in disbelief of what we had just witnessed. Of
course, it's part of the game to lose a race, but it's something
different when you lose faith in racing," Mercedes said.
"Together with Lewis, we have deliberated carefully over how to
respond to the events... we have always been guided by our love of
this sport and we believe that every competition should be won on
merit.
"In the race on Sunday many felt, us included, that the way things
unfolded was not right."
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Red Bull's Max Verstappen celebrates winning the race and the world
championship on the podium with the trophy Pool via REUTERS/Kamran
Jebreili
The safety car was deployed five laps from the end
after Canadian Nicholas Latifi crashed his Williams, with marshals
needing to be on track to recover it.
Racing resumed with one lap remaining after race director Michael
Masi broke with a protocol requiring all lapped cars should overtake
the safety car first.
Instead, only those between Verstappen and Hamilton unlapped
themselves, giving the Red Bull driver a clear track to close on
Hamilton and overtake.
Hamilton had not pitted, unlike Verstappen, when the safety car was
deployed because he would have lost the lead and Mercedes calculated
there was not enough time remaining to resume racing under the
rules.
"We appealed in the interest of sporting fairness," said Mercedes.
"We have since been in a constructive dialogue with the FIA and
Formula One to create clarity for the future, so that all
competitors know the rules under which they are racing, and how they
will be enforced.
"To Max Verstappen and Red Bull Racing: we would like to express our
sincere respect for your achievements this season," the team added.
"You made this Formula One championship title fight truly epic. Max,
we congratulate you and your entire team. We look forward to taking
the fight to you on the track next season."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Andrew Heavens and Toby
Davis)
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