Hamilton surprised over Ron Dennis’s exit from McLaren

Beijing, Apr.18 (ANI): Lewis Hamilton has expressed surprise over the exit of Ron Davis from Formula One, but was not disappointed.

“I wasn’t disappointed,” said Hamilton. “I was surprised as I hadn’t heard about it. I was just as surprised as the rest of my team. Of course, Ron has been a huge force in supporting my life and he still plays a key role in that,” the Daily Express quoted hamilton as saying after he had set the fastest time during first practice in China.

Dennis, 61, who built the McLaren team into the giant it is today, has stepped aside to run the company’s new independent automotive group.

“It can only be positive for him. He loves a challenge,” said Hamilton of Dennis’s move.

Asked if he welcomed the decision, Hamilton said: “I’m not going to fight it, am I?”

Hamilton and the team’s now-sacked sporting director Dave Ryan lied to race stewards in Australia – and in Malaysia – over the same incident. Dennis’s retreat from F1 duties could make things easier for the team, called to answer charges of fraudulent conduct by the FIA’s World Motor Sports Council on April 29. (ANI)

McLaren-Mercedes could face further sanctions over Melbourne

Paris – Formula One team McLaren-Mercedes will have to could face further sanctions over the incident in Melbourne in which Toyota driver Jarno Trulli was first penalized for overtaking McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton.

The sports governing body FIA said Tuesday that McLaren would have to appear before an extraordinary meeting of the FIA World Motor Sport Council in Paris on April 29.

Trulli, who finished third, was penalized 25 seconds for overtaking in a safety car phase and Hamilton, who placed fourth, was bumped up to third as a result.

A later investigation by race stewards found that McLaren and Hamilton had deliberately given wrong information at the first and subsequent hearing. They then reinstated Trulli as third place finisher and disqualified Hamilton.

But McLaren could face further sanctions after FIA announced Tuesday that the team would have to answer charges that they were in breach of article 151c of the International Sporting Code.

This article states that any team is in breach if they have engaged in: “Any fraudulent conduct or any act prejudicial to the interests of any competition or to the interests of motor sport generally.”

In a statement FIA said that McLaren told the stewards of the Australian Grand Prix that no instructions were given to Hamilton in Car No. 1 to allow Trulli in Car no. 9 to pass when both cars were behind the safety car, knowing this statement to be untrue.

McLaren is said to have then told Hamilton to support and confirm this untrue statement to the stewards.

“Although knowing that as a direct result of its untrue statement to the stewards, another driver and a rival team had been unfairly penalised, (McLaren) made no attempt to rectify the situation either by contacting the FIA or otherwise.

“On 2 April, 2009, at a second hearing before the stewards of the Australian Grand Prix, (meeting in Malaysia) (McLaren) made no attempt to correct the untrue statement of 29 March but, on the contrary, continued to maintain that the statement was true, despite being allowed to listen to a recording of the team instructing Hamilton to let Trulli past and despite being given more than one opportunity to correct its false statement.”

FIA said that the team continued to tell Hamilton to be untruthful about the incident even though he knew that what he was saying to the stewards was not true.

McLaren had earlier on Tuesday parted ways with sporting director Dave Ryan, who is said to have been behind Hamilton’s and the team’s attempts to mislead the race stewards.

The team also said that they would co-operate fully with FIA to clear the matter up.

In 2007 McLaren were fined 100 million US dollars and stripped of all their points in the constructors’ championships. (dpa)

FIA to take McLaren to task over Hamilton cheating episode on April 29

London, Apr.8 (ANI): The FIA World Motorsport Council has asked representatives of McLaren to appear before it in Paris on April 29 to answer charges relating to being in breach of the International Sporting Code.

The summons follows Lewis Hamilton’s exclusion from the Australian grand prix for giving “misleading” evidence to race stewards.

According to The Guardian, McLaren are accused of being in specific breach of Article 151c of the sporting code, relating to “any fraudulent conduct or any act prejudicial to the interests of any competition or to the interests of motor sport generally”.

According to an FIA statement, McLaren are to answer charges that they:

On 29 March 2009, told the stewards of the Australian grand prix that no instructions were given to Hamilton in car No1 to allow (Jarno) Trulli in car No9 to pass when both cars were behind the safety car, knowing this statement to be untrue.

Procured its driver, Hamilton, the current world champion, to support and confirm this untrue statement to the stewards.

Although knowing that, as a direct result of their untrue statement to the stewards another driver and a rival team had been unfairly penalised, made no attempt to rectify the situation either by contacting the FIA or otherwise.

On 2 April 2009, at a second hearing before the stewards of the Australian grand prix (meeting in Malaysia), made no attempt to correct the untrue statement of 29 March but, on the contrary, continued to maintain the statement was true, despite being allowed to listen to a recording of the team instructing Hamilton to let Trulli past and despite being given more than one opportunity to correct the false statement.

On 2 April 2009, at the second stewards’ hearing, procured their driver Hamilton to continue to assert the truth of the false statement given to the stewards on 29 March, while knowing what he was saying to the stewards was not true.

In a statement issued by McLaren, and in a further attempt to try to appease the WMSC, the team have confirmed they have sacked Dave Ryan, their former sporting director. Ryan was suspended on Friday after the storm surrounding the case blew up before Sunday’s Malaysian grand prix.

The new charges mark the third time McLaren have been hauled before the WMSC in less than two years. (ANI)