Mercedes not ruling out another grid drop for Hamilton
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[October 23, 2021] By
Alan Baldwin
(Reuters) -Mercedes would not rule out Formula One title contender
Lewis Hamilton taking another engine penalty this season after team
mate Valtteri Bottas incurred a five-place drop at the U.S. Grand
Prix on Friday.
Bottas, who was fastest in first practice for Sunday's U.S. Grand
Prix at Austin's Circuit of the Americas, is now using his sixth
engine -- three more than he is allowed for the season.
The Finn already had grid penalties at the Italian and Russian
Grands Prix for exceeding his allocation.
Hamilton took a 10-place penalty at this month's Turkish Grand Prix
for using a fourth engine and Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff would
not rule out the seven times world champion having to do it again.
"I can't say whether we will be taking one (another penalty) and how
are the percentages," the Austrian told reporters. "But obviously
the risk is still there.
"What is difficult to evaluate is do you want to pre-empt the
situation and take another penalty, and take the hit, or do you want
to really run it and then possibly risk a DNF (non-finish).
"That is a discussion which is happening as we speak and we haven't
come to the right answers yet."
Hamilton is six points behind Red Bull's Max Verstappen in the
championship with six races remaining. Austin has been one of their
best tracks in recent years.
Verstappen, 24, started at the back of the grid in Russia last month
after taking his fourth Honda engine of the campaign and finished
second.
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Mercedes' Valtteri Bottas in the pits during practice REUTERS/Mike
Blake
Aston Martin, Williams and McLaren also use
Mercedes engines, the most reliable in the past but now causing
unexpected headaches.
Williams George Russell and Aston Martin's Sebastian Vettel are both
set to start at the back of the grid in Austin after power unit
changes.
"You see that we are suffering with reliability this year, we’re
going onto the sixth engine ... and it’s not something that we
choose to do," said Wolff.
"We are trying to really get on top of the problems and we haven’t
understood fully ... We are hanging on for dear life in supplying
all customers and that is not trivial."
Red Bull boss Christian Horner said it was clear Mercedes had issues
to resolve but their cars were still eye-catchingly fast, with
Bottas almost a second a lap quicker than Verstappen in first
practice.
"It's not usual for them in previous years to run their engines as
hard as they have done this year in the first session," he told Sky
Sports television. "They are definitely running them harder."
Mercedes are 36 points clear of Red Bull in the cosntructors'
standings but facing a major battle after seven years of success.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Ken Ferris)
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