All Formula One teams are cheats, claims Irvine

London, Sep 18 (ANI): Ex-Ferrari driver Eddie Irvine has claimed that all Formula One teams are cheats.

Irvine says there has been an overreaction to the race-fixing charges being levelled at the Renault team.

He admitted the Crashgate scandal that cost Renault team chief Flavio Briatore and technical boss Pat Symonds their jobs had gone too far.

“F1 is a war and all is fair in war. When I was in various teams you would do anything to win. You pushed people off, you did whatever you could do to win,” he said.

“This is probably slightly on the wrong side of the cheating thing, but in F1 – if you look back at days gone past – then every team has done it. They will cheat, bend the rules, do whatever they could, sabotage opponents.

“Nothing was beyond the realms of decency and that is what F1 always is. It is not a pure sport,’ The Sun quoted Irvine, as saying.

The Renault team still has to appear before the World Motor Sport Council in Paris on Monday where they face a massive fine, race suspension or even being kicked out of the sport.

But Irvine reckons they could escape with a more lenient penalty amid fears that another team is about to leave the sport.

Irvine, who also raced for Jordan and Jaguar, added: “If you think that McLaren got a 100 million dollars fine for having some papers of the Ferrari team, what punishment is relevant here? It is complete banning. But I don’t believe that is going to happen as F1 cannot afford to lose more teams.”

Briatore threatened to sue Piquet Snr after the three-time world champ made the revelations about his son. (ANI)

Alonso insists he was not involved in race-fix scandal

London, Sep 11 (ANI): Ace driver Fernando Alonso has insisted that he was not involved in the race-fix scandal, which has rocked Formula One.

The Spaniard’s Renault team face being kicked out of the sport after being charged with ordering their former driver Nelson Piquet to crash in last September’s Singapore Grand Prix.

Brazilian Piquet has claimed the order came from team chief Flavio Briatore and technical director Pat Symonds in a meeting before the race.

Piquet crashed into a wall after 14 laps helping Alonso, who had pitted just two laps earlier, to take the lead and hold on to give Renault its first win of the season.

“No. For me, it’s difficult to understand this situation and these investigations. I’m surprised but it’s time to start thinking about the Italian Grand Prix. I’m not spending any time on this,” Alonso said when asked whether he knew of the alleged fix.

“Flavio is one of the good people here and he always has my support. He is nice person, a nice boss. He is a friend who has always supported my career from the time I was at Minardi,” The Sun quoted Alonso, as saying.

The Anglo-French team will have to answer the charges at a meeting of the World Motor Sport Council in Paris on September 21. The WMSC has the power to impose a massive fine, suspend the team or kick the French car manufacturer out of the sport.

The transcript of Piquet’s written evidence to the investigators backs up Alonso’s claim that he was not involved in the alleged fix.

Piquet, 24, was sacked by Britatore after last July’s Hungarian GP because of poor results and is then understood to have gone to the FIA – the sport’s governing body – with the shock claims.

In the statement, Piquet claims he was told by Symonds to crash on lap 17 as there was no crane near that spot. That meant the safety car would be sent out giving the advantage to Alonso from his early stop as all the main contenders had to go into the pits. (ANI)