FIA concludes Masi made a 'human error' at F1 Abu Dhabi GP
Motorsport's governing body FIA concluded Saturday that ex-Formula One race director Michael Masi made a "human error" but acted in good faith at the controversial season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix last year.
Masi was replaced as race director last month after the wild Abu Dhabi ending. Red Bull driver Max Verstappen won his first world title after overtaking Mercedes star Lewis Hamilton on the last lap following a controversial restart procedure.
Hamilton led comfortably until a crash by Nicholas Latifi brought out the safety car with five laps remaining. Verstappen stopped under yellow flags for quicker tires, and Masi flipped his decision and let the five drivers separating Verstappen from Hamilton pass the safety car under yellow. But not all eight, which would have taken longer.
"The process of identifying lapped cars has up until now been a manual one and human error lead to the fact that not all cars were allowed to un-lap themselves," the FIA said as it published its final conclusions on Saturday. "Due to the fact that manual interventions generally carry a higher risk of human error, software has been developed that will, from now on, automate the communication of the list of cars that must un-lap themselves." Masi also called the safety car back too early.
"The race director called the safety car back into the pit lane without it having completed an additional lap," the FIA said.
Verstappen restarted second behind Hamilton and, on quicker new tires, zoomed past Hamilton in the fifth turn. Mercedes lost both its protests over how the race ended.
Verstappen's status as world champion, while not in doubt, has effectively been confirmed on the eve of Sunday's opening race in Bahrain.
"The results of the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix and the FIA Formula One World Championship are valid, final and cannot now be changed," the FIA said.
Speaking after qualifying on Saturday, where he placed a modest fifth, Hamilton didn't sound like this was even affecting him anymore. Plus he hadn't yet had the time to read the report and a reporter told him the conclusions of it.
"I've been focused on getting the job done," Hamilton said. "Honestly, I'll read it maybe after the weekend or something like that. I wasn't expecting an apology."
Both Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff and Hamilton seem keen to move on from this now, but both did express some satisfaction that human error had been recognized.
Masi was cleared of any wrong intent and the FIA said he was just doing his best to finish the race.
"In combination with the objective to finish under green flag racing conditions applied throughout the 2021 season, the report finds that the race director was acting in good faith and to the best of his knowledge given the difficult circumstances," the FIA said. "Particularly acknowledging the significant time constraints for decisions to be made and the immense pressure being applied by the teams." That intense pressure saw team leaders from Hamilton's Mercedes team and Verstappen's Red Bull both talking heatedly to him live on television, as he was trying to make the toughest call of his career.
Direct radio communications have now been removed in order to protect the race director from external pressure. Structural changes have seen the creation of a new soccer-style Virtual Race Control Room, which will be called the Remote Operations Center (ROC).
"The ROC will act as a supporting resource for the race direction team with data comparable to that of more than ten simultaneous football matches, including over 140 video and audio sources," the FIA said.
Agencies
Most Popular
- Chinese ace stuns world no 6 Rublev, advances to China Open semis
- Zheng defeats Podoroska to set up Anisimova rematch
- Antoine Griezmann announces retirement from international football
- World No. 3 Wang Manyu reaches last 32 at WTT China Smash
- City's draw with Newcastle allows Liverpool to snag top spot
- Osasuna stuns Barca in four-midable display